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■e Daily CoUegian BALL ONE - BUI Mason, Fresno State College dogs, 5-0, In a non-league game. The next home third baseman, "takes' a pitch for bdl one during for Pde Belden's team is on March 4 against Tuesday afternoon's game agdnst the Phillies Pepperdlne at 2:30 p.m. Rookies. Three PhUlles pitchers blanked the Bull- (Photo by Frank Frlezel) Three Phillies Pitchers Blank Bulldog Baseball Team, 5-0 The Phillies Rookies bunched dl of their runs and hits In two Innings to defed the Fresno State College basebaU team 5-0 Tues¬ day afternoon before 500 fans. The game, which lasted less than two hours, saw Bulldog pitchers Buzz Stephen and Dends Pllatl set down the first 18 Phil¬ lies In order. However, the pro team exploded for four hits and three runs off losing pitcher Doug Modrell In the seventh Modrell was tagged for a totd of five runs and six hits In his three Innings of work. Three PhUlles pitchers, Butch Runvllle, Mike Scroller, and Don Hammlt, limited Fresno to four hits. RunvUle, who was the win¬ ning pitcher, hurled the first five innings, allowing only three hits. Scroller pitched two frames and Hammlt one. Starter Stephen struck out four of the nine players he faced and did not dlow any of the Phillies to hit a bdl past toe Infield. Plldl got good support from teammate Gary Baldwin at short¬ stop. Baldwin robbed a base hit from former FSC player Phil Mastagd In the fifth Inning. Mas- tagnl hit a blooper on the left field line, about 25 feet behind third baseman BUI Mason, and Baldwin, playing deep, made a running catch before crashing In¬ to the fence. The Rookies greeted loser Modrell with throe consecutive singles. Dan Irving hit one to left field, Larry Bowa, who was the only player |n^collect more Infield Gde drove Irving with a single. Mastagd was given a free pass to load the bases. Marty Plscovlch then tag¬ ged Modrell for a single to drive In Bowa and Gde. The Inning ended when Dick Sollls hit Into a double play. r ^ucolle en Ray Ga top of the eighth it the Rookies down In ts and a fly Bowa opened the last frame with a single and then advanced to third on Gde's single to left field. On the throw Into third, Gde advanced to second. They came In on a sacrifice fly and an The Bulldogs wUl play two away games this weekend. Fresno faces SantaClaraUdverslty Fri¬ day and Saturday plays the University of Cdltornla dBerk- DAMES AND GAMES (Continued from Page 7) thojr own experiences. •AU tod happened was toe girls acted silly and toe boys played rough,' said a woman student. An FSC letter man remembered high school coed swimming classes. •There was Jud a Id of hanky panky going on." •Boys are still too antagonistic toward girls to Junior high to have coed programs work,* sdd another student. Fortundely, this attitude doesn't carry over Into the coUege years. There have beenalot of changes which have pushed coed sports Into toe spotlight. There's more trend toward recreatlond type sports now, toe kinds of activities which people wUl be enjoying as long as they can walk. Such temptations as bowling, Ice skating, goU, badminton, tennla, modern dance and archery are typlcd of lded boy-girl pursuits. Another prejudice which has long hampered more coed program¬ ming is the archaic Idea tod women should teach women and men should teach men. Golf professionals blasted this myth long ago. Some of the finest teachers of women golfers are men; some of the best teachers of men are women. Miss Mason's Foundations class agreed tod lt didn't matter to them whether a man or woman teach their sports dasses. Knowledge of the activity and teaching ability are the ody prerequisites. There are many advantages In coeducatlond physlcd education. Men tend to be more analytical of activities. They also tend to play harder, and motivate the women to do likewise. There's a mutud respect which often results, too. Women learn to admire the strength and skill of toe men. The men learn that It's a mistake to confuse brute strength with finesse. And coed class members learn tod sldll is not limited Just to the men In one activity, or ody to women to another. Coordlndlon gets passed out democrdlcaUy. There are a couple of problems waiting to be untangled betore FSC adds to its list of coeducational physical education courses. The men's department has class meetings three times a week. The women meet ody twice. Until this programming can be synchronlxed, further overlapping of activities will lie difficult. Coed classes now meet for two hours. Then there Is dso the question of what activities should be co¬ educational. There are those which obviously should not be-boxtng, football, basketbdl and wrestling as taught by Dick Francis. There are those which are obviously suitable because adults everywhere are entered In mixed competitions In the sports-goU, tennis, bad¬ minton, bowling. Dance Is a very apparent candidate for coed listing. 1 I SPORT SHORTS I NEW YORK-The escdators at Shea Stadium, home of the Amer¬ ican Football League Jets and the National Basebdl League Mets, have a carrying capacity of 58,000 per hour. CLEVELAND-The Cleveland Browns were pendlzed 21 times for 209 yards In a 1951 game agdnst the Chicago Bears for a National Footbdl League record DiCicco's Pizzeria Four Sons of Italy .Specializing to ITALIAN DINNERS Also Food to Go *Ddlv»ryServic( OPEN4PM--3 AM/ Family Billiards 530 N. Blackstone .__ ■ (off Belmont) AD7-70* USC Is On '67 Grid Slate A change of dates at the end of the 1966 slate and the renewal of rivalry with the University of Santa Clara In 1967 mark the comple¬ tion of Fresno State CoUege's 1966 and '67 footbdl schedules. The change moves the San Jose State game from Nov. 18 to 19, In Spartan Stadium. In the nine games between the schools, SantaClara won seven, FSC one and there was one tie. The Bulldogs wiU host Santa Clara, Sept. 16, 1967. The schools have not met since 1949. DECISIONS - DECISIONS - DECISIONS Your Udverslty Trust representative has to solutions to marry of your problems. 2kg,- See Your University Trust Representatives "^Jl Dick Rivet—Tom Lyons—Ralph Eymann UNIVERSITY TRUST MHi TOVVM»»«. SMIL'S DOWNTOWN BARBER SHOP 423 Pollasky EDWIN'S JEWELRY THE DAILY Periodicals ds; PO| COLLEGIAN FRESNO STATE COLLEGE Weather Partly cloudy and a chance ot sprinkles today. High today, 61- 66, Fresno, 64,low, 37-42, Fres¬ no, 40. GenUe winds and ellghUy warmer Friday with tewacattar- ed showers and patches ot morn¬ ing fog. Thursday, February 24,1966 Engineers Plan Open House WORKS LIKE THIS Wayne San FlUppo, a co- chairman ot the Fresno State CoUege School of Engineering's open house Friday, explains a me¬ tering device which Is used to measure fuel flow and performance characteristics of toe Rover IS/60 gas turbine to Carolyn Stevens. The machine Is Just one of many that will be demonstrated during the event from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. (Photo by Ryan Marty) Wallace Asks Students To Decide Fate Of Four-Day Reading Period A •AU the formal channels have been foUowed, the fate of the pro¬ posed reading period must now be decided by the lndlvldud student on campus." Dead Week Committee Chdr- man Harvey Wdlace placed the responsibility for obtaining a reading period this semester squarely on the shoulders of Fresno State CoUege students when he made this statement d Wednesday night's student coun¬ cU executive committee meeting. Wallace stressed that a reading period wodd not be a cramming •You cram overnight, not tour days betore finals,* be asserted. He Sdd toe reading period, U granted by FSC President Fred¬ eric W. Ness, wodd be May 28, 29, 30 and 31, during toe latter part of 'Dead Week.* •Since Monday, May 30, to Memortd Day, we are ody ask¬ ing tor one actual academic day, May 31,* he pointed out. Wallace reported approxi¬ mately BOO student signatures backing toe proposal have been gathered and tod petitions wUl continue to be circulated on cam¬ pus. 1 feel U 3,000 student signa¬ tures are obtained, president Ness wUl have a bard Ume re¬ fusing to grant a reading period,' he concluded. The merits of an Association- sponsored teacher evaluation booklet, similar to toe 'Guano* sold by toe Student Political Ed¬ ucation Action Committee d the beginning of the fall semester, were discussed d length d the meeting. Student President Ernlo Kinney will appoint a committee tomor¬ row to study the proposd and come up with a recommendation for or against Association spon¬ sorship of an evaluation booklet. The committee will Include a member of SPEAC, he sdd. The executive committee recommended that tho Who's Who Committee's new sd of criteria tor choosing candidates for Who's Who to American CoUeges and Universities be adopted by stu¬ dent councU. The criteria states that a candidate must have accomplish¬ ed something significant to of¬ fices or chairmanships, have d least a 2.25 grade point average, hold or have hdd a position ot responsibility, be recognized as outstanding In bis department or field and have made an outstand¬ ing contribution to coUege, com¬ munity or ration. Nominative procedures also have been dtered to assure tod committee selections represent a cross-section of the student body. Kinney emphasized tod be did not appoint a new committee be¬ cause he felt lad semeder's Who's Who Committee recom¬ mendations were to poor lade. He blasted The DaUy CoUegian tor Its criticism of tho candidates chosen, because 'the CoUegian editor was not present d the committee meetings and didn't submit a list of prospective candidates. I don't see how peo¬ ple can expect to got people nom¬ inated U they don't have toe gump¬ tion to show up.* Kinney dso charged tod most DaUy CoUegian letters to toe editor protesting candidates chosen tor the Who's Who book were from Journalism students. He conceded tod some of these persons had the right to protest their being omitted from the Hat of names submitted. Class Drop Data Set Friday is toe lad day to drop a class. Courses dropped on or betore Friday wUl not be listed on the permanent record. Courses may be dropped with¬ out fine until Mar. 18. Forms lor dropping classes are available to the student Records office. Students from 81 San Joaquin Valley high schools and Junior coUeges wUl attend the Fresno State CoUege School of Engineer¬ ing's eighth annual open house Friday from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. The evert wlU cUmax Natloud Engineers' Week which began Monday. Theme tor the week is •Engineering - Creative Re¬ source tor Progress.' According to Wayne San Fellp- po and Tom Perch, co-chairmen of the open house, exhibits from five laboratories and toe Elec¬ trodes Section will be sd up to give students Information about various engineering programs d FSC. Film Version Of Steinbeck To Be Shown The story of the dust-bowl droughts ot toe 1930's Is told In The Grapes of Wrath, tonight's presentation In toe Board ot Fine Arts Movie Series. The film wUl be shown d 7:30 In Industrial Arts 101. No admission will be charged for students and faculty mem- Based on the novel by John Steinbeck, The Grapes of Wrath depicts toe plight of toe migrant workers who move from the mid¬ west to CaUfomla. Starred to toe 1940 movie are Henry Fonda, Jane DarweU, John Carradtoe and Ward Bond. John Ford directed the film. The fUm won Academy Awards tor Best Direction (Ford) and Best Supporting Actress (Miss DarweU). Other honors accorded The Grapes of Wrath Include the New York Critics Awards tor Best Perfo.'.nanco by an Actor (Fonda). Teachers' Meeting Open To Students Members ot toe Student Cdl¬ tornla Teachers Association and other students planning to becomo teachers have been invited to toe annud Profession^ Field Con¬ ference sponsored by toe Fresno Teachers Association Friday to the Hacienda Motd. Nick Kinney, president of the campus chapter of toeSCTA, sdd there wUl be tour sessions con¬ cerning the problems of educa¬ tion, starting d 4:30. There wUl dso be a banquet d 6:30 to the Las Vegas room. The featured speaker wUl be Dr. James Jarrett, associate dean of toe School ofEducatloOjUdverdtyof Cdltornla d Berkeley. James Lundberg, toe faculty advisor tor the SCTA, add toe registration fee U S4 tor the tour sessions and toe banquet. He sdd the Fresno Teachers Association wUl pay one-halt toe fee ot the first 25 students to sign upon the SCTA buUetin board to the educa- tion-Psychdogy Building. Metala, Matarlala Testing and Electricd Machinery Laborator- by engineering stu- Equipment to the Hed-Power Laboratory U oriented to pro¬ duction or -use ot mechaded power. In most cases, the ma¬ chines are converters tod change hed energy to mechaded The Fluids Lab deda with fluid characteristics, behavior and metering. Main attraction In toe area is the wind tunnel to which air as a fluid Is studied. The tunnel can produce velocities up to 350 mUes per hour. Major equipment to toe Metals Laboratory Include toe Rlechde Tester, which is a machine tod aUowa a student to Investigate the amount ot energy a specimen will absorb betore lt wlU frac¬ ture; and the hed furnaces which combine various ranges ot tem¬ peratures, atmospheres and ac¬ curacies to reproduce many bed tredment processes. FSC engineering students to the Materials Testing Lab wUl show equipment tod tests concrde, wood, steelanddumlnumtorten¬ sion, compression, bend and tor- The Electricd Machinery Lab win show the use of auxiliary equipment such as wattmeters, voltage and current Instrument transformers and strobe lights. Demonstrations to the Elec¬ trode's Section wUl Include radar as used to traffic control by law enforcement agencies and projects which represent lndl¬ vldud engineering efforts by sen¬ ior FSC students. Kreuger Row Aired By Ness Four faculty associations which denounced PhU Krueger's resignation as a faculty member and football coach are living up to their word. Meeting with Dr. Frederic W. Ness, toe association presidents suggested to him tod the school hue a person that Is not now teaching classes d another school. If this Is not possible, toe per¬ son who is being hired should get full consent of his present em¬ ployer, a faculty member said. This was stipulated because criti¬ cized him tor leaving his students during the middle ot a semester. The group dso suggested to hire a coach, but delay toe start of his duties until nert faU. One suggestion to solve the problem ot spring practice would be to nave toe prospective bead coach give plana to his assis¬ tants. The head coach would be able to come during the wc The faculty groups, FSC chapter of Association California State CoUege Professors,Amer¬ ican Association of University- Professors, American Federa¬ tion ot Teachers, and the Aca¬ demic Chapter ot the Cdltornla State Employees took these ac¬ tions Tuesday afternoon.
Object Description
Title | 1966_02 The Daily Collegian February 1966 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1966 |
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 | Feb 23, 1966 Pg. 8- Feb 24, 1966 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1966 |
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 | ■e Daily CoUegian BALL ONE - BUI Mason, Fresno State College dogs, 5-0, In a non-league game. The next home third baseman, "takes' a pitch for bdl one during for Pde Belden's team is on March 4 against Tuesday afternoon's game agdnst the Phillies Pepperdlne at 2:30 p.m. Rookies. Three PhUlles pitchers blanked the Bull- (Photo by Frank Frlezel) Three Phillies Pitchers Blank Bulldog Baseball Team, 5-0 The Phillies Rookies bunched dl of their runs and hits In two Innings to defed the Fresno State College basebaU team 5-0 Tues¬ day afternoon before 500 fans. The game, which lasted less than two hours, saw Bulldog pitchers Buzz Stephen and Dends Pllatl set down the first 18 Phil¬ lies In order. However, the pro team exploded for four hits and three runs off losing pitcher Doug Modrell In the seventh Modrell was tagged for a totd of five runs and six hits In his three Innings of work. Three PhUlles pitchers, Butch Runvllle, Mike Scroller, and Don Hammlt, limited Fresno to four hits. RunvUle, who was the win¬ ning pitcher, hurled the first five innings, allowing only three hits. Scroller pitched two frames and Hammlt one. Starter Stephen struck out four of the nine players he faced and did not dlow any of the Phillies to hit a bdl past toe Infield. Plldl got good support from teammate Gary Baldwin at short¬ stop. Baldwin robbed a base hit from former FSC player Phil Mastagd In the fifth Inning. Mas- tagnl hit a blooper on the left field line, about 25 feet behind third baseman BUI Mason, and Baldwin, playing deep, made a running catch before crashing In¬ to the fence. The Rookies greeted loser Modrell with throe consecutive singles. Dan Irving hit one to left field, Larry Bowa, who was the only player |n^collect more Infield Gde drove Irving with a single. Mastagd was given a free pass to load the bases. Marty Plscovlch then tag¬ ged Modrell for a single to drive In Bowa and Gde. The Inning ended when Dick Sollls hit Into a double play. r ^ucolle en Ray Ga top of the eighth it the Rookies down In ts and a fly Bowa opened the last frame with a single and then advanced to third on Gde's single to left field. On the throw Into third, Gde advanced to second. They came In on a sacrifice fly and an The Bulldogs wUl play two away games this weekend. Fresno faces SantaClaraUdverslty Fri¬ day and Saturday plays the University of Cdltornla dBerk- DAMES AND GAMES (Continued from Page 7) thojr own experiences. •AU tod happened was toe girls acted silly and toe boys played rough,' said a woman student. An FSC letter man remembered high school coed swimming classes. •There was Jud a Id of hanky panky going on." •Boys are still too antagonistic toward girls to Junior high to have coed programs work,* sdd another student. Fortundely, this attitude doesn't carry over Into the coUege years. There have beenalot of changes which have pushed coed sports Into toe spotlight. There's more trend toward recreatlond type sports now, toe kinds of activities which people wUl be enjoying as long as they can walk. Such temptations as bowling, Ice skating, goU, badminton, tennla, modern dance and archery are typlcd of lded boy-girl pursuits. Another prejudice which has long hampered more coed program¬ ming is the archaic Idea tod women should teach women and men should teach men. Golf professionals blasted this myth long ago. Some of the finest teachers of women golfers are men; some of the best teachers of men are women. Miss Mason's Foundations class agreed tod lt didn't matter to them whether a man or woman teach their sports dasses. Knowledge of the activity and teaching ability are the ody prerequisites. There are many advantages In coeducatlond physlcd education. Men tend to be more analytical of activities. They also tend to play harder, and motivate the women to do likewise. There's a mutud respect which often results, too. Women learn to admire the strength and skill of toe men. The men learn that It's a mistake to confuse brute strength with finesse. And coed class members learn tod sldll is not limited Just to the men In one activity, or ody to women to another. Coordlndlon gets passed out democrdlcaUy. There are a couple of problems waiting to be untangled betore FSC adds to its list of coeducational physical education courses. The men's department has class meetings three times a week. The women meet ody twice. Until this programming can be synchronlxed, further overlapping of activities will lie difficult. Coed classes now meet for two hours. Then there Is dso the question of what activities should be co¬ educational. There are those which obviously should not be-boxtng, football, basketbdl and wrestling as taught by Dick Francis. There are those which are obviously suitable because adults everywhere are entered In mixed competitions In the sports-goU, tennis, bad¬ minton, bowling. Dance Is a very apparent candidate for coed listing. 1 I SPORT SHORTS I NEW YORK-The escdators at Shea Stadium, home of the Amer¬ ican Football League Jets and the National Basebdl League Mets, have a carrying capacity of 58,000 per hour. CLEVELAND-The Cleveland Browns were pendlzed 21 times for 209 yards In a 1951 game agdnst the Chicago Bears for a National Footbdl League record DiCicco's Pizzeria Four Sons of Italy .Specializing to ITALIAN DINNERS Also Food to Go *Ddlv»ryServic( OPEN4PM--3 AM/ Family Billiards 530 N. Blackstone .__ ■ (off Belmont) AD7-70* USC Is On '67 Grid Slate A change of dates at the end of the 1966 slate and the renewal of rivalry with the University of Santa Clara In 1967 mark the comple¬ tion of Fresno State CoUege's 1966 and '67 footbdl schedules. The change moves the San Jose State game from Nov. 18 to 19, In Spartan Stadium. In the nine games between the schools, SantaClara won seven, FSC one and there was one tie. The Bulldogs wiU host Santa Clara, Sept. 16, 1967. The schools have not met since 1949. DECISIONS - DECISIONS - DECISIONS Your Udverslty Trust representative has to solutions to marry of your problems. 2kg,- See Your University Trust Representatives "^Jl Dick Rivet—Tom Lyons—Ralph Eymann UNIVERSITY TRUST MHi TOVVM»»«. SMIL'S DOWNTOWN BARBER SHOP 423 Pollasky EDWIN'S JEWELRY THE DAILY Periodicals ds; PO| COLLEGIAN FRESNO STATE COLLEGE Weather Partly cloudy and a chance ot sprinkles today. High today, 61- 66, Fresno, 64,low, 37-42, Fres¬ no, 40. GenUe winds and ellghUy warmer Friday with tewacattar- ed showers and patches ot morn¬ ing fog. Thursday, February 24,1966 Engineers Plan Open House WORKS LIKE THIS Wayne San FlUppo, a co- chairman ot the Fresno State CoUege School of Engineering's open house Friday, explains a me¬ tering device which Is used to measure fuel flow and performance characteristics of toe Rover IS/60 gas turbine to Carolyn Stevens. The machine Is Just one of many that will be demonstrated during the event from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. (Photo by Ryan Marty) Wallace Asks Students To Decide Fate Of Four-Day Reading Period A •AU the formal channels have been foUowed, the fate of the pro¬ posed reading period must now be decided by the lndlvldud student on campus." Dead Week Committee Chdr- man Harvey Wdlace placed the responsibility for obtaining a reading period this semester squarely on the shoulders of Fresno State CoUege students when he made this statement d Wednesday night's student coun¬ cU executive committee meeting. Wallace stressed that a reading period wodd not be a cramming •You cram overnight, not tour days betore finals,* be asserted. He Sdd toe reading period, U granted by FSC President Fred¬ eric W. Ness, wodd be May 28, 29, 30 and 31, during toe latter part of 'Dead Week.* •Since Monday, May 30, to Memortd Day, we are ody ask¬ ing tor one actual academic day, May 31,* he pointed out. Wallace reported approxi¬ mately BOO student signatures backing toe proposal have been gathered and tod petitions wUl continue to be circulated on cam¬ pus. 1 feel U 3,000 student signa¬ tures are obtained, president Ness wUl have a bard Ume re¬ fusing to grant a reading period,' he concluded. The merits of an Association- sponsored teacher evaluation booklet, similar to toe 'Guano* sold by toe Student Political Ed¬ ucation Action Committee d the beginning of the fall semester, were discussed d length d the meeting. Student President Ernlo Kinney will appoint a committee tomor¬ row to study the proposd and come up with a recommendation for or against Association spon¬ sorship of an evaluation booklet. The committee will Include a member of SPEAC, he sdd. The executive committee recommended that tho Who's Who Committee's new sd of criteria tor choosing candidates for Who's Who to American CoUeges and Universities be adopted by stu¬ dent councU. The criteria states that a candidate must have accomplish¬ ed something significant to of¬ fices or chairmanships, have d least a 2.25 grade point average, hold or have hdd a position ot responsibility, be recognized as outstanding In bis department or field and have made an outstand¬ ing contribution to coUege, com¬ munity or ration. Nominative procedures also have been dtered to assure tod committee selections represent a cross-section of the student body. Kinney emphasized tod be did not appoint a new committee be¬ cause he felt lad semeder's Who's Who Committee recom¬ mendations were to poor lade. He blasted The DaUy CoUegian tor Its criticism of tho candidates chosen, because 'the CoUegian editor was not present d the committee meetings and didn't submit a list of prospective candidates. I don't see how peo¬ ple can expect to got people nom¬ inated U they don't have toe gump¬ tion to show up.* Kinney dso charged tod most DaUy CoUegian letters to toe editor protesting candidates chosen tor the Who's Who book were from Journalism students. He conceded tod some of these persons had the right to protest their being omitted from the Hat of names submitted. Class Drop Data Set Friday is toe lad day to drop a class. Courses dropped on or betore Friday wUl not be listed on the permanent record. Courses may be dropped with¬ out fine until Mar. 18. Forms lor dropping classes are available to the student Records office. Students from 81 San Joaquin Valley high schools and Junior coUeges wUl attend the Fresno State CoUege School of Engineer¬ ing's eighth annual open house Friday from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. The evert wlU cUmax Natloud Engineers' Week which began Monday. Theme tor the week is •Engineering - Creative Re¬ source tor Progress.' According to Wayne San Fellp- po and Tom Perch, co-chairmen of the open house, exhibits from five laboratories and toe Elec¬ trodes Section will be sd up to give students Information about various engineering programs d FSC. Film Version Of Steinbeck To Be Shown The story of the dust-bowl droughts ot toe 1930's Is told In The Grapes of Wrath, tonight's presentation In toe Board ot Fine Arts Movie Series. The film wUl be shown d 7:30 In Industrial Arts 101. No admission will be charged for students and faculty mem- Based on the novel by John Steinbeck, The Grapes of Wrath depicts toe plight of toe migrant workers who move from the mid¬ west to CaUfomla. Starred to toe 1940 movie are Henry Fonda, Jane DarweU, John Carradtoe and Ward Bond. John Ford directed the film. The fUm won Academy Awards tor Best Direction (Ford) and Best Supporting Actress (Miss DarweU). Other honors accorded The Grapes of Wrath Include the New York Critics Awards tor Best Perfo.'.nanco by an Actor (Fonda). Teachers' Meeting Open To Students Members ot toe Student Cdl¬ tornla Teachers Association and other students planning to becomo teachers have been invited to toe annud Profession^ Field Con¬ ference sponsored by toe Fresno Teachers Association Friday to the Hacienda Motd. Nick Kinney, president of the campus chapter of toeSCTA, sdd there wUl be tour sessions con¬ cerning the problems of educa¬ tion, starting d 4:30. There wUl dso be a banquet d 6:30 to the Las Vegas room. The featured speaker wUl be Dr. James Jarrett, associate dean of toe School ofEducatloOjUdverdtyof Cdltornla d Berkeley. James Lundberg, toe faculty advisor tor the SCTA, add toe registration fee U S4 tor the tour sessions and toe banquet. He sdd the Fresno Teachers Association wUl pay one-halt toe fee ot the first 25 students to sign upon the SCTA buUetin board to the educa- tion-Psychdogy Building. Metala, Matarlala Testing and Electricd Machinery Laborator- by engineering stu- Equipment to the Hed-Power Laboratory U oriented to pro¬ duction or -use ot mechaded power. In most cases, the ma¬ chines are converters tod change hed energy to mechaded The Fluids Lab deda with fluid characteristics, behavior and metering. Main attraction In toe area is the wind tunnel to which air as a fluid Is studied. The tunnel can produce velocities up to 350 mUes per hour. Major equipment to toe Metals Laboratory Include toe Rlechde Tester, which is a machine tod aUowa a student to Investigate the amount ot energy a specimen will absorb betore lt wlU frac¬ ture; and the hed furnaces which combine various ranges ot tem¬ peratures, atmospheres and ac¬ curacies to reproduce many bed tredment processes. FSC engineering students to the Materials Testing Lab wUl show equipment tod tests concrde, wood, steelanddumlnumtorten¬ sion, compression, bend and tor- The Electricd Machinery Lab win show the use of auxiliary equipment such as wattmeters, voltage and current Instrument transformers and strobe lights. Demonstrations to the Elec¬ trode's Section wUl Include radar as used to traffic control by law enforcement agencies and projects which represent lndl¬ vldud engineering efforts by sen¬ ior FSC students. Kreuger Row Aired By Ness Four faculty associations which denounced PhU Krueger's resignation as a faculty member and football coach are living up to their word. Meeting with Dr. Frederic W. Ness, toe association presidents suggested to him tod the school hue a person that Is not now teaching classes d another school. If this Is not possible, toe per¬ son who is being hired should get full consent of his present em¬ ployer, a faculty member said. This was stipulated because criti¬ cized him tor leaving his students during the middle ot a semester. The group dso suggested to hire a coach, but delay toe start of his duties until nert faU. One suggestion to solve the problem ot spring practice would be to nave toe prospective bead coach give plana to his assis¬ tants. The head coach would be able to come during the wc The faculty groups, FSC chapter of Association California State CoUege Professors,Amer¬ ican Association of University- Professors, American Federa¬ tion ot Teachers, and the Aca¬ demic Chapter ot the Cdltornla State Employees took these ac¬ tions Tuesday afternoon. |