April 18, 1968 Pg. 8- April 19, 1968 Pg. 1 |
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In Tempe Saturday 8 THE DAILY COLLEQIAN Thutad Bulldogs To Meet Fast ASU Sun Devils By kE> ROfBSON of the season. CsrrenUy 1-2 la dual action, the "Dogs will be meet¬ ing a strong SaoderU team that will be led by sprinter jerry Bright, who ran tor FSC coach ■iter's Pas American games. Bright, the former Oakland prep star, has been clocked at 9.-4 In the 100 and around 20.4 In the 200. Bright and teammate Mil, who has run a 9.8 In the 100, will give the 'Devils the adran- Tbe Artiooans are two-strong in every naming event except the hurdles. Ron Freeman and run¬ ning mate Earl McDoweU make up a good pair in the 440. Freeman has run in the 46's, and McDoweU has a time of 48.5. In the 880, Sun Devils Paul Longstreth and Korwln have post¬ ed times of 1:51.9 and 1:52.4, rc- spectlTely, and in me mUe, Ken Robinson and Chock Lehbenz have been clocked in 4.-08.4 and 4.-09.7. Two mlier Jerry Jobskl has e Benx in the mUe wUl be Denals Scbanx with a best time of 4:18 J. Bulldog John KaUwara is injured. Dare Wanuerdam, 1:55 J and Dose Carret, 1:56.4, will run a olsme best bet to challenge Freeman and McDoweU In the 440. His best time is 49.3. Banning the sprints tor FSC wfll be Jeff Perenon, Mark Bog- Coach Warmerdam hopes tor Bulldog sweeps In both hurdles and In the long jump and triple jomp. In the field events the two squads are almost eTen, except tor the Fresno superiority In the long and triple jumps. Kenth Svensson will compete against Isaiah Oakes of Arizona State In Dick Rambo, who has gone 15- ind Bulldog Tim Buchanan, wh has bit 15 feet. Arizona should be favored h the relays, according to Warmer i. Their U mUe and 41 f better than I aoau, aelates Warmerdam. The Bulldogs stayed with Stanford all the way and lost by only 12 points. "We hope some of our kids can break their one-two In some of the events,* he added. 4 feet • 58, but the BuUdog leads s with a ... on 7 170. The second men In the dis¬ cus will also battle as Jesus Ortiz, who has thrown 167 feet for the TaevUs wUl match up against Charles Gardner of FSC with a 168-2 mark. Scott Claspey of FSC, who boasts a toss of 160-8 wlU also be a against UC Santa Barbara set i BuUdog top season mark of 9:14.1 and Cords has run i 9:18.7. Trying to stay with Robinson The javelin is a tossup, ac¬ cording to Warmerdazn. John Warkentin and Charles will go for the Bulldogs. In the pole vault, Finn Erkkl tor FSC but U PASSING THE BUCK—Fresno's Ervln Hunt takes the baton from . Perenon in the 440-yard relay. The Bulldog relay team will have hands full arainsl Arizona State this weekend. THREE MILE- Dare Cords, 14;13.8, Joe Dunbar, 14:27.5; John Kaawara, 14:44.0 MILE RELAY- Dick Newton (50.7), John Edmondson (48.3), Bob Williams (49.8), Ezunlal Burts (49.4), 3:18.2 JAVELIN- John Warkentin, 187-4; Charles Fraster, 170-5, Bruce Koch (Ft), 118-7 (■01 PUT - Kenth Srensson, 54-0; Ron Hrtmin, 51-3 1/2; Scott Glaspey, 48-6; John Warkentin, 43-9 LONG JUMP- Dick Newton, 22-9 1/2; Mike Hard, 22-5; John Wartentin, 20-10 POLE VAULT - Erkkl Mustakari, 17-0 1/2 (FSC School Record); Tim Buchanan, 14-6; John Warkentin, 13-0 DISCUS - Kenth Svensson, 176-5 (FSC School Record); Charles Gardner, 168-2; Scott Glaspey, 160 8; Dave Farley, 155-6 (FSC Freshman Record); John Warkentin, 143-0 HIGH JUMP - Steve Pavlefa, 6-2; John Warkentin, 5-10 TRIPLE JUMP- Errtn Hunt, 48-9 1/2; Mike Hurd, 46-8 1/2; Dick Bulldog Season Bests 7.5; John 440 RELAY- MILE RUN - 880 YARDS - Jeff Perenon, Ervln Hunt, Ezunlal Burts, Job Edmondson, 42.2 Dennis Schanz, 4:18.3; Dave Cords, 4:19.4; Joh Kajlwara, 4:22.6; Matt Dyer-Bennett, 4:25.5; Reg gle Harris, 4:28.1. Ervln Hunt, 14.6; Gary Finch, 14.9; JohnWarken 5000 METERS - ■a Kajlwara, 15:13.0 OAKLAND LOSES tin, 15.6 Burts, 50.5; 55.1 JEFF PERENON, 10.2; Ezunlal Burts, 10.3;Mark Bogdanovich, 10.3; John Warkentin, 10.5 -Dave Warmerdam, 1:55.3; Doug Calvet, 1:56.4; BUI McCarthy (Fr), 1:58.5 Gary Finch, 54.5; Ervln Hunt, 55.2; Ezunlal Burts, 56.9; John WarkenUn, 56.5; Ron Wicker, 59.8; Don Toews, 62.1 Mark Bogdanovich, 22.2; Al Celestine, 22.6 Joe Dunbar, 9:14.1; Dave Cords, 9:18.7; Dennis Schanz, 9:35.5; Jim Dowdall (Fr), 9:47.8 WELCOME BACK! a ME V ED'S PIZZA Special NOW SHOWING! This coupon >>• worrh... Jv . FRIFNDLY Al | FOR FRIENDLY PEOPLE < ME 'n' ED'S PIZZA PARLOR N BIACKSTONI NIAR SHAW *fflffrkW THE WORLD IN 80 DAYS' DsvidNlvBn Cantinflas RpbertNewton ShiriqjMacLaine • THE DAILY- COLLEGIAN FRESNO STATE COLLEGE aeavaTatafarawavawaaai FRE SNO. C A LI FORNIA saavavavavaiavawataw The Twain Shall Meet New Yoga Mixes East And West By SYLVIA SELLECK Collegian Staff Writer Integral Yoga, the latest de¬ velopment of Indian Yoga tradi¬ tions "Is the line along which ar Integration of the cultural value! of East and West Is sought,* sale Dr. Harldas Chaudhurl, lnterna- recognlzed authority or lt I EB Yoga, o-day ; erday li e nrst ol » State College. Chaudhurl defined the ke; of modern Western culture i tlons. Integral Yoga com) this drive with the dominant Ileal trait of the Indian culti standpoint o: ldual Ufe, blossom and ripen to maturity, from the depth of the roots of Its whole being - free — flowing cannot realize his spiritual po¬ tential by following the path of conformity to an external stan¬ dard Imposed by others.* "All people, regardless of their religious background, race, na¬ tionality, or creed - regardless of anything, can follow this path - One does not even have to have a beUef In God. . . "AU that is required Is a gen- } balanced growth of our personality," Chaudhurl charged. *We human beings have extremist tendencies . . . that Is why wo so often suf¬ fer from lopsided development. "In our schedule of Ufe we should have room for regular practice of medltaUon suppU- mented by selfless loving acUon truth and to truth - the wind of truth wh< soever It leads.* light o . The lr nedlta- splrlt that you gave » tlon has to be applied to life." Chaudhurl also examined the different systems of mystical In¬ dian Yoga from which Integral Yoga is derived. An individual should follow the path which is Indian phUosophy the department or South Alsa at the American Academy of Asian Studies, a graduate school of Indian Philosophy In San Fran¬ cisco. Chaudhurl will also be present at an autograph party this afternoon at 2:30 In the FSC The approach of Integral Yoga Living* wUl be discussed at 1 o'clock today In Sclonce 121. Choice '68 Student Poll Set Wednesday Campus Radio To Feature New All-Rock Fridays KFSR, tho campus radio sta¬ tion, wUl go all-rock on Fridays The new Friday format, to be known as the "Top Three and Thirty*, wUl be under the direc¬ tion of station disc Jockeys Brett Miller and Larry Weber. The "Top Three and Thirty* wlU Include the top 30 rock songs ♦throughout the Fresno Indicated by record sale: also feature three top tunes a requested by KFSR Usteners. MUler will be on the air whei wUl work to 7 p.m. when Webe; takes over undl closing Ume a 11:15 p.ro. News wUl continue oi caU KFSR (487-2655) during sta¬ tion hours or may fill out request forms which will be avaUable in the urban crisis In the U.S. On the course of action that should be taken In Vietnam, collegiate voters choose from "Immediate withdrawal of U.S. forces; phased reduction of U.S. mUltary activity; maintain cur¬ rent level of mUltary activity; Increase level of mUltary actlvl- I'aUoi ,tary el will of co-sponsoring d ballots are IBM Sould be punched Concerning the urban crisis, students Indicate which area, ed¬ ucaUon, Job training, housing, ln- i government spending. HK Greeted By 5,000 Fans in arrival last night, Kennedy spoke to a crowd of 5,000 sup¬ porters at the Fresno Air Ter- TAKE ME OUT TO THE BALL GAME—Pert Gloria Kelley si what good shape a baseball diamond can be In. A Junior physical education major, Miss Kelley draws attention to the fact that the Bulldogs will open a nine game CCAA home stand today at 2:30 p.m. in Varsity Park against league-leading Long Beach State. Ag Students Get Credit For Future Farmers Day Lloyd Dowler, dean of the Fresno State College School of Agriculture, gives most of the credit for the preparaUon of the 29th annual Future Farmers of America field day to the school's •We're proud of our students," said Dowler, "Saturday's field day represents the largest that we've ever attempted. It's really quite a project, and lt looks as though we're going to have close to 400 students devoting an enUro According to Dowler, the de¬ le purpose of the fleld day,' Four FSC students have been named chairmen for the event. Jerald O'Banton and John Cedar- qulst have been named senior co- John Rodriguez have been named a national collegiate presldenUal primary, Wednesday. BaUotlng at Fresno State CoUege wUl be from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The naUonal coUege primary, created by Time -Life Corpora¬ tion and sponsored at FSC by Circle K and Spurs, Is a na¬ Uonal referendum onpresldentlal Rafferty Asks For Teacher Exam iy, dairy catUe, entomology, farm vln< rult mUk, ornamental horti¬ culture, poultry and vegetable crops. Over 300 Judging teams are expected to compete. Robert GUm, Dowler's assis¬ tant, said the students whose the official Judge wUl win tho compeUtlon. The Judging contests wUl take place In the morning and the awards will be given out An examination for teachers coming to California, and per- proposod to the State Board of According to a re.csat article In Action, a CallXornta'Teachers Association newspaper, State Su¬ perintendent ofPubllc Instruction Max Rafferty said If the teachers failed to pass a test In basil! com¬ petency they should go back to school untU they are able to meet the requirements. *We Just don't know what the basic competency of the out-of- state teacher is," he added and said he Is partfculary concerned with ability in English. Dr. Rafferty indicated he would like all new teachers to take the state appUcants at first. "If it works with these people, we can always expand lt to others." Board members were told that many other states and districts In California now give the Na¬ tional Teacher Examination or other tests to applicants. Dorman Commons, board member from Los Angeles, said, ■We should act on a very specific proposal with very specific guidelines." An opposing opinion is held by Edward Elssey at Florida State University. According to Elssey's doctoral Peace Corps Returnees Set Talk wlllbt a discus Wednesday Collegian Room of the Cafeteria. The discussion period will be for anyone Interested In the Peace Corps and who would like to ask questions of people who have actuaUy served a year or more. •We have returnd to Fresno State as students," said Doug Shumavon, a returnee, "hut stUl maintain a great interest in the Peace Corps and would like to see more students volunteer thelr >nly agriculture the Mississippi it of volunteer- ship In the corps, wUl be a guest speaker at the gathering. Variables In Teacher Per¬ formance there Is no significant correlation between NTE scores and principals' ratings of teach- in the Peace Corps will Thursday and Friday i In Thomas Administration BuUd- laf 117, Persons Interested In the ex¬ amination may sign up at the Peace Corps information booth In front of the Education-Psy¬ chology Building. teaching certificate. A positive correlation between the university supervision rating quent performance as rated by the principal was also Indicated. Elssey also reported that he found a positive correlation be-
Object Description
Title | 1968_04 The Daily Collegian April 1968 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1968 |
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 | April 18, 1968 Pg. 8- April 19, 1968 Pg. 1 |
Alternative Title | Daily Collegian (California State University, Fresno) |
Publisher | Associated Students of Fresno State, Fresno, Calif. |
Publication Date | 1968 |
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 | In Tempe Saturday 8 THE DAILY COLLEQIAN Thutad Bulldogs To Meet Fast ASU Sun Devils By kE> ROfBSON of the season. CsrrenUy 1-2 la dual action, the "Dogs will be meet¬ ing a strong SaoderU team that will be led by sprinter jerry Bright, who ran tor FSC coach ■iter's Pas American games. Bright, the former Oakland prep star, has been clocked at 9.-4 In the 100 and around 20.4 In the 200. Bright and teammate Mil, who has run a 9.8 In the 100, will give the 'Devils the adran- Tbe Artiooans are two-strong in every naming event except the hurdles. Ron Freeman and run¬ ning mate Earl McDoweU make up a good pair in the 440. Freeman has run in the 46's, and McDoweU has a time of 48.5. In the 880, Sun Devils Paul Longstreth and Korwln have post¬ ed times of 1:51.9 and 1:52.4, rc- spectlTely, and in me mUe, Ken Robinson and Chock Lehbenz have been clocked in 4.-08.4 and 4.-09.7. Two mlier Jerry Jobskl has e Benx in the mUe wUl be Denals Scbanx with a best time of 4:18 J. Bulldog John KaUwara is injured. Dare Wanuerdam, 1:55 J and Dose Carret, 1:56.4, will run a olsme best bet to challenge Freeman and McDoweU In the 440. His best time is 49.3. Banning the sprints tor FSC wfll be Jeff Perenon, Mark Bog- Coach Warmerdam hopes tor Bulldog sweeps In both hurdles and In the long jump and triple jomp. In the field events the two squads are almost eTen, except tor the Fresno superiority In the long and triple jumps. Kenth Svensson will compete against Isaiah Oakes of Arizona State In Dick Rambo, who has gone 15- ind Bulldog Tim Buchanan, wh has bit 15 feet. Arizona should be favored h the relays, according to Warmer i. Their U mUe and 41 f better than I aoau, aelates Warmerdam. The Bulldogs stayed with Stanford all the way and lost by only 12 points. "We hope some of our kids can break their one-two In some of the events,* he added. 4 feet • 58, but the BuUdog leads s with a ... on 7 170. The second men In the dis¬ cus will also battle as Jesus Ortiz, who has thrown 167 feet for the TaevUs wUl match up against Charles Gardner of FSC with a 168-2 mark. Scott Claspey of FSC, who boasts a toss of 160-8 wlU also be a against UC Santa Barbara set i BuUdog top season mark of 9:14.1 and Cords has run i 9:18.7. Trying to stay with Robinson The javelin is a tossup, ac¬ cording to Warmerdazn. John Warkentin and Charles will go for the Bulldogs. In the pole vault, Finn Erkkl tor FSC but U PASSING THE BUCK—Fresno's Ervln Hunt takes the baton from . Perenon in the 440-yard relay. The Bulldog relay team will have hands full arainsl Arizona State this weekend. THREE MILE- Dare Cords, 14;13.8, Joe Dunbar, 14:27.5; John Kaawara, 14:44.0 MILE RELAY- Dick Newton (50.7), John Edmondson (48.3), Bob Williams (49.8), Ezunlal Burts (49.4), 3:18.2 JAVELIN- John Warkentin, 187-4; Charles Fraster, 170-5, Bruce Koch (Ft), 118-7 (■01 PUT - Kenth Srensson, 54-0; Ron Hrtmin, 51-3 1/2; Scott Glaspey, 48-6; John Warkentin, 43-9 LONG JUMP- Dick Newton, 22-9 1/2; Mike Hard, 22-5; John Wartentin, 20-10 POLE VAULT - Erkkl Mustakari, 17-0 1/2 (FSC School Record); Tim Buchanan, 14-6; John Warkentin, 13-0 DISCUS - Kenth Svensson, 176-5 (FSC School Record); Charles Gardner, 168-2; Scott Glaspey, 160 8; Dave Farley, 155-6 (FSC Freshman Record); John Warkentin, 143-0 HIGH JUMP - Steve Pavlefa, 6-2; John Warkentin, 5-10 TRIPLE JUMP- Errtn Hunt, 48-9 1/2; Mike Hurd, 46-8 1/2; Dick Bulldog Season Bests 7.5; John 440 RELAY- MILE RUN - 880 YARDS - Jeff Perenon, Ervln Hunt, Ezunlal Burts, Job Edmondson, 42.2 Dennis Schanz, 4:18.3; Dave Cords, 4:19.4; Joh Kajlwara, 4:22.6; Matt Dyer-Bennett, 4:25.5; Reg gle Harris, 4:28.1. Ervln Hunt, 14.6; Gary Finch, 14.9; JohnWarken 5000 METERS - ■a Kajlwara, 15:13.0 OAKLAND LOSES tin, 15.6 Burts, 50.5; 55.1 JEFF PERENON, 10.2; Ezunlal Burts, 10.3;Mark Bogdanovich, 10.3; John Warkentin, 10.5 -Dave Warmerdam, 1:55.3; Doug Calvet, 1:56.4; BUI McCarthy (Fr), 1:58.5 Gary Finch, 54.5; Ervln Hunt, 55.2; Ezunlal Burts, 56.9; John WarkenUn, 56.5; Ron Wicker, 59.8; Don Toews, 62.1 Mark Bogdanovich, 22.2; Al Celestine, 22.6 Joe Dunbar, 9:14.1; Dave Cords, 9:18.7; Dennis Schanz, 9:35.5; Jim Dowdall (Fr), 9:47.8 WELCOME BACK! a ME V ED'S PIZZA Special NOW SHOWING! This coupon >>• worrh... Jv . FRIFNDLY Al | FOR FRIENDLY PEOPLE < ME 'n' ED'S PIZZA PARLOR N BIACKSTONI NIAR SHAW *fflffrkW THE WORLD IN 80 DAYS' DsvidNlvBn Cantinflas RpbertNewton ShiriqjMacLaine • THE DAILY- COLLEGIAN FRESNO STATE COLLEGE aeavaTatafarawavawaaai FRE SNO. C A LI FORNIA saavavavavaiavawataw The Twain Shall Meet New Yoga Mixes East And West By SYLVIA SELLECK Collegian Staff Writer Integral Yoga, the latest de¬ velopment of Indian Yoga tradi¬ tions "Is the line along which ar Integration of the cultural value! of East and West Is sought,* sale Dr. Harldas Chaudhurl, lnterna- recognlzed authority or lt I EB Yoga, o-day ; erday li e nrst ol » State College. Chaudhurl defined the ke; of modern Western culture i tlons. Integral Yoga com) this drive with the dominant Ileal trait of the Indian culti standpoint o: ldual Ufe, blossom and ripen to maturity, from the depth of the roots of Its whole being - free — flowing cannot realize his spiritual po¬ tential by following the path of conformity to an external stan¬ dard Imposed by others.* "All people, regardless of their religious background, race, na¬ tionality, or creed - regardless of anything, can follow this path - One does not even have to have a beUef In God. . . "AU that is required Is a gen- } balanced growth of our personality," Chaudhurl charged. *We human beings have extremist tendencies . . . that Is why wo so often suf¬ fer from lopsided development. "In our schedule of Ufe we should have room for regular practice of medltaUon suppU- mented by selfless loving acUon truth and to truth - the wind of truth wh< soever It leads.* light o . The lr nedlta- splrlt that you gave » tlon has to be applied to life." Chaudhurl also examined the different systems of mystical In¬ dian Yoga from which Integral Yoga is derived. An individual should follow the path which is Indian phUosophy the department or South Alsa at the American Academy of Asian Studies, a graduate school of Indian Philosophy In San Fran¬ cisco. Chaudhurl will also be present at an autograph party this afternoon at 2:30 In the FSC The approach of Integral Yoga Living* wUl be discussed at 1 o'clock today In Sclonce 121. Choice '68 Student Poll Set Wednesday Campus Radio To Feature New All-Rock Fridays KFSR, tho campus radio sta¬ tion, wUl go all-rock on Fridays The new Friday format, to be known as the "Top Three and Thirty*, wUl be under the direc¬ tion of station disc Jockeys Brett Miller and Larry Weber. The "Top Three and Thirty* wlU Include the top 30 rock songs ♦throughout the Fresno Indicated by record sale: also feature three top tunes a requested by KFSR Usteners. MUler will be on the air whei wUl work to 7 p.m. when Webe; takes over undl closing Ume a 11:15 p.ro. News wUl continue oi caU KFSR (487-2655) during sta¬ tion hours or may fill out request forms which will be avaUable in the urban crisis In the U.S. On the course of action that should be taken In Vietnam, collegiate voters choose from "Immediate withdrawal of U.S. forces; phased reduction of U.S. mUltary activity; maintain cur¬ rent level of mUltary activity; Increase level of mUltary actlvl- I'aUoi ,tary el will of co-sponsoring d ballots are IBM Sould be punched Concerning the urban crisis, students Indicate which area, ed¬ ucaUon, Job training, housing, ln- i government spending. HK Greeted By 5,000 Fans in arrival last night, Kennedy spoke to a crowd of 5,000 sup¬ porters at the Fresno Air Ter- TAKE ME OUT TO THE BALL GAME—Pert Gloria Kelley si what good shape a baseball diamond can be In. A Junior physical education major, Miss Kelley draws attention to the fact that the Bulldogs will open a nine game CCAA home stand today at 2:30 p.m. in Varsity Park against league-leading Long Beach State. Ag Students Get Credit For Future Farmers Day Lloyd Dowler, dean of the Fresno State College School of Agriculture, gives most of the credit for the preparaUon of the 29th annual Future Farmers of America field day to the school's •We're proud of our students," said Dowler, "Saturday's field day represents the largest that we've ever attempted. It's really quite a project, and lt looks as though we're going to have close to 400 students devoting an enUro According to Dowler, the de¬ le purpose of the fleld day,' Four FSC students have been named chairmen for the event. Jerald O'Banton and John Cedar- qulst have been named senior co- John Rodriguez have been named a national collegiate presldenUal primary, Wednesday. BaUotlng at Fresno State CoUege wUl be from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The naUonal coUege primary, created by Time -Life Corpora¬ tion and sponsored at FSC by Circle K and Spurs, Is a na¬ Uonal referendum onpresldentlal Rafferty Asks For Teacher Exam iy, dairy catUe, entomology, farm vln< rult mUk, ornamental horti¬ culture, poultry and vegetable crops. Over 300 Judging teams are expected to compete. Robert GUm, Dowler's assis¬ tant, said the students whose the official Judge wUl win tho compeUtlon. The Judging contests wUl take place In the morning and the awards will be given out An examination for teachers coming to California, and per- proposod to the State Board of According to a re.csat article In Action, a CallXornta'Teachers Association newspaper, State Su¬ perintendent ofPubllc Instruction Max Rafferty said If the teachers failed to pass a test In basil! com¬ petency they should go back to school untU they are able to meet the requirements. *We Just don't know what the basic competency of the out-of- state teacher is," he added and said he Is partfculary concerned with ability in English. Dr. Rafferty indicated he would like all new teachers to take the state appUcants at first. "If it works with these people, we can always expand lt to others." Board members were told that many other states and districts In California now give the Na¬ tional Teacher Examination or other tests to applicants. Dorman Commons, board member from Los Angeles, said, ■We should act on a very specific proposal with very specific guidelines." An opposing opinion is held by Edward Elssey at Florida State University. According to Elssey's doctoral Peace Corps Returnees Set Talk wlllbt a discus Wednesday Collegian Room of the Cafeteria. The discussion period will be for anyone Interested In the Peace Corps and who would like to ask questions of people who have actuaUy served a year or more. •We have returnd to Fresno State as students," said Doug Shumavon, a returnee, "hut stUl maintain a great interest in the Peace Corps and would like to see more students volunteer thelr >nly agriculture the Mississippi it of volunteer- ship In the corps, wUl be a guest speaker at the gathering. Variables In Teacher Per¬ formance there Is no significant correlation between NTE scores and principals' ratings of teach- in the Peace Corps will Thursday and Friday i In Thomas Administration BuUd- laf 117, Persons Interested In the ex¬ amination may sign up at the Peace Corps information booth In front of the Education-Psy¬ chology Building. teaching certificate. A positive correlation between the university supervision rating quent performance as rated by the principal was also Indicated. Elssey also reported that he found a positive correlation be- |