SynDns recently. Sh

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TRUSTEES 1EIITII G--In case you haven't heard, tl e OSU lbard of Trustees will Id their Apr. 1 meeting here at ATl. ey are seled led for a 9:30 a.m. fis- cal affairs committee meeting in the Conference Roan, followed by a public 10:30 a.nl. mee ing in Rcxm 286. Dean Kottman will present a slide narrative about AT! at about 11: 30 and the board is scheduled to tour the building at noon. Faculty anti staff are obviously welcome to attend. EXTENSION TEACHERS--Dr. Dan Garrison and Dr. Jerry Haltennan met Mar. 1 with . Associate Director of the Cooperative Extension Service George Gist to discuss agricultural technical course at technical institutions in southeastern Ohio. The three proposed a joint appointment arrangement for extension persons in the southeast area to teach technical courses. So far, no response has been received from the Board of . Regents J who initiated the meeting, or technical institutions. On that same day J Dr. Garrison attended a session in which the Cornell Diagnostic Observation and Reporting Systan was discussed by Dr. Harold R. Cushman of New York. The ATI Teaching Coomi ttee has the infonna- tion about the computerized system for evaluating teaching if any faculty mem- bers are interested. Both lvIar. 1 meet- ings were held at the OOU College of Agric 1ture . In-service activities that are considered whe promoting and .tenur·ng fae Ity are provided through the five faculty committees for in- service: . ni-leaves i dividualized inst ct ·cnal mate ia , haring days wi thin AT!, tests and rreasurenents, and prabl lv·ng. So--facu ty need to t · "tiative i rki g with these cornnitt , especla .ly ideril g ho,v little is left til he d of the acadanie year. MIKE IUGGS has been recruiting students recently by traveling to ten of the 13 high schools which have natural re- source programs. says he's re- ceived excellent feedback, but he "lOOt roore horse/flower types, as usual." He took along his newly print brochures and "bo\v1ed 'an over. If He talked to atout 150-250 students. Mike also re- quests that faculty menbers pick up a brochure (or brochures) to take bane to their hanetown high schools, tack up in the laundranat, or put in church bulletins. NEW <XXJRSE-A new math course T294D will be offered in the Spring and could be a good course for students looking for electives. It's in Ag Mechanics and will include graphi,.ng, quadratic equations, simultaneous equa- ti,?DS J logarithms, trig and sane geane- tr1 constructions. Ti1re is to be arranged.

Transcript of SynDns recently. Sh

TRUSTEES 1EIITII G--In case you haven't heard, tl e OSU lbard of Trustees will

Id their Apr. 1 meeting here at ATl. ey are seled led for a 9:30 a.m. fis­

cal affairs committee meeting in the Conference Roan, followed by a public 10:30 a.nl. mee ing in Rcxm 286. Dean Kottman will present a slide narrative about AT! at about 11: 30 and the board is scheduled to tour the building at noon. Faculty anti staff are obviously welcome to attend.

EXTENSION TEACHERS--Dr. Dan Garrison and Dr. Jerry Haltennan met Mar. 1 with . Associate Director of the Cooperative Extension Service George Gist to discuss agricultural technical course offerin~at technical institutions in southeastern Ohio. The three proposed a joint appointment arrangement for extension persons in the southeast area to teach technical courses. So far, no response has been received from the Board of . Regents J who initiated the meeting, or technical institutions. On that same day J Dr. Garrison attended a session in which the Cornell Diagnostic Observation and Reporting Systan was discussed by Dr. Harold R. Cushman of New York. The ATI Teaching Coomittee has the infonna­tion about the computerized system for evaluating teaching if any faculty mem­bers are interested. Both lvIar. 1 meet­ings were held at the OOU College of Agric 1ture .

~lINDER: In-service activities that are considered whe promoting and

.tenur·ng fae Ity are provided through the five faculty committees for in­service: .ni-leaves i dividualized inst ct ·cnal mate ia , haring days within AT!, tests and rreasurenents, and prabl lv·ng. So--facu ty need to t · "tiative i rki g with these cornnitt , especla .ly ideril g ho,v little t~ is left til he d of the acadanie year.

MIKE IUGGS has been recruiting students recently by traveling to ten of the 13 high schools which have natural re­source programs. ~like says he's re­ceived excellent feedback, but he "lOOt roore horse/flower types, as usual." He took along his newly print brochures and "bo\v1ed 'an over. If He talked to atout 150-250 students. Mike also re­quests that faculty menbers pick up a brochure (or brochures) to take bane to their hanetown high schools, tack up in the laundranat, or put in church bulletins.

NEW ~fA'IH <XXJRSE-A new math course T294D will be offered in the Spring and could be a good course for students looking for electives. It's in Ag Mechanics and will include graphi,.ng, quadratic equations, simultaneous equa­ti,?DS J logarithms, trig and sane geane­tr1 constructions. Ti1re is to be arranged.

mrnnm finIDMW~: ( di °0 Blosser, P isc' la Elaine ( )

ens, Shawna Jean (Dairy) Gray, T-anmy Lynn (Floric) Guess, Ronald Philip (Crops) Riedl, James Robert ('furf)

ADVIOORY cntMI'I'I'Ern-The Forest Products Advisory Cornuttee ,vi 1 et Mar. 25. Landscape's Advi ory Coornittee ° ch­uled to ap)ear at AT . 22.

'lTh rsonle

t to

DR. GARRI will travel to Fargo, . D. Ap . 4-6 to participa e i th North Central Regional ~leet' g of Deans and Directors of Land Grant Colleges and Universitites.

AT! REPS--Dr. Garrison travel to Columbus ~1ar. 15 to represe TI at the regular Ohio Doard of He ents me ­ing. Dr. Hal tennan represented ATI the same day at the State DepartIrent of Education meeting in P~.

P I U e 'r'''''_rYln_

or his prorrrarn 0 be sumust offer tudents realism. Wit tlecquisitiOI of 29 new head and the contant upgrading of other st , Th

feels AT!' s 1 rs bar s are gen ratinga lot of ry arrong other stables. lies y m s ave put $150 ,000 war h ofcolt into AT! student's hands for

ak°ng and trai i g, and Gaff'n ° pper, a four year old that AT ra

.as a and three year old, brou ht 22 0 len it v.ras sold recentl. 'Tl o e ge erated. ' 0,000 of winn' gs ·or

i To doer wh e ning a Th 29 new hor es . 11 str gtl en

h e /. er s 0 alf the es viII be red to tloroughbreds and half to quarter horses. S ,vill be broken to run and others vill be dev­eloped into hunters. Raymond S ltzber­ger of Richburg, S. C. read about the AT! program and believe it or not is not taking a tax write off with his gift. He told Duane he just wanted to 0 sane­tling for kids.

VINTER CiR.AOO: 'rhe followingf' a , corrected officia

e-1 ain, Mansf' .¥layne Cecil, fa

vid Thanas Erpev Pa 1 Fin e ·ewJ

. hl (agay eland, BrJ hI Edwin IIowison ,V'lOja isti a JanaviciPlilip William Levison,

lIen Lee Maddy, Sparta, N. J. Step le lark Mihalek, Panna IIeig It Stephen ances Iurphy , Cincinnati Joshua Da id Nelson, Princeton, N. J. Phillip lbert Sankar, IX>ver Robert Clayton Sarver, exford, Pa. Mark AIle Sigrist, \Yes Salen 'l liwn Arnold Sl ell , 'Tooster

Laude

2

d mixed doubles partner a 1ar. 4 round robin

Ra seco d in their group 0

1 0

\\'in over for' othe

t .e the op . place team 0

i e that p with a tie-

ament at the Canton 1all uet Club. I' ncla and Ron

the f· rst place team groU) of nine team:;. Tp

ro I-y, they beat he heir own group,

L iA, P IILl can ecated eth Bi SynDns recently. Sh leving in 11f

ap nt-- d eeping er the stat at 65° • Because she's ch' lly, one of the first things she said she did was mooch

firewood f am none other than former AT staffer E Kinsey, 0' s a nursery­man oxvi let

yo've Il

3

GARY ANDERfD

a maj an plan public r 1""'''' ......, ... ,._ b . essj· d tion, lega i te,.... tJ.... """W'-4"" ......'-',~4.>Jgroup counseling, Veterans training, d interesting point dis ss series of n~tings, accor . v,'aS the fact that, even t colleges are state suppa t general maintain an open oar __'~""""J_"'M_.~__

policy I ach,ussions can be leg

1

AP

stricted to any individ al p bb

Seninar \ as sponrored by the Depa.rtnEnt 0

ocational Education and t Division of Guidance and Testing.

4

SAlLY CXXJI."h"Y, second year nursery manage­ment student, has been chose .one of 1 students to tra . at tl I .;) ·"t ig .0

Mo ravia Nur "erie in Azu.... , C'", ..... iforn .a this sunmer. The l~ wer chosen ~ran

over 130 applicants. The en week r:ro­gram begins JW1e 13 and includec" t ' in ing in propagation, planting, canning, pruning, irrigation and spraying.

5

Mar. 2 J

GI T takes pe am co recounts

Cl •

ttryside. Fo

Iris frus ations and he t~

warming experien s j learning to become a good vet d in a hieve ing h~ny within a small nglish ~ GLENN Al.lKE, tr inin and d 10 munity. officer for Landmark, and Curt Dunham,

Landmark public relations director, will PDS, NOVA--FEEDBACX-A juvenile deten­ talk to AT! persons Mar. 25 about attri­

tion center uses Nova programs for butes of Lanchnark enployees and hrnv ATI late night vie\Ving and early rrorn­ can better train st dents to meet Land­ing rap sessions, a teacher in an mark t s needs. David Munn is the liaison Diego turns Voyage of the Hokule' a for the visit. . into a survival lesson J and PTST

eaks out on TV violence.

Mar. 3 , Ch. 25, 8 p.m.-THE 'I1IIRD NOVA GU DE: '!HE -ItThfAN k~IMAL--A r spect­

Iarvard zooiogi t, sociobi 1 gis d aut ori y ts vs camp' .

so s bet n society and an t colony. T· p gram offers an

excellent opportunity for students to study human and animal behavior.

Apr. 6, Ch. 25, 8 p.m.-TIIE \'sOLF ~UA­TION--This program offer look at the pre 1 pro Alaska and r eals th ries about wildl· fe managane t. It studies th year y rek y c i herds and \\01 .. pac o· th Alaskan Artie to the nortle nmost regions 0

the IDrld to bear their YOWlg. In rece t year , however, t 1 re has been an imbalance bet\veen the t\\O

species because of seve e weather conditions and other factors. 7

a cl

- - -

OOEMA APIS-John Ca 1k will trave 21 to Cornell Univers·ty to visit with Ohio's State Apiarist and Dr. Roger

rse, fannus apiculturalist. They will discuss osana Ap· s, a disease that

pes out honey crops by k'lling young bees and shortening the life span of

t bees.by as much as 5ak.

IE lINE i-You probably hav,­seen t e NID'1 roru,{ to use when suhnitti 19 our rk to the iAaIINE Rn.i. By usingt

a duplicate copy, you wil ha e a ecord of the rk su · tted an the tot ntml­her of cop· es run. e · 1 tain the

i te copy in he mac ine roan to use for our rronth y eport and it °11 be a double c ... to that have can­plet t e r you l:mi.tted. PS: Re­member as ch lead time as possible.

~'_~.A""",~~I n are con­0struct t e asanent wall and footers

this reek on Phase I . They will rrove the pol houses and starting . d' ng fuelOt · fro t of t e i s p n e Ia i-I ·

the shop the polyl ouses to be

f the present rt storage

CELLED--Lack of interest has

be rroved to the north O'

will alIaarth

eng spot.

ca s the cancellation of this year's ann ale I t m sorry to say that the ru­IOOrs you may have heard are true. \Ve had a total of 55 subscribers---­not ough to support the heavy cost of publishing a book and certai ly not enough to justify a loss of nearly $2000. Lac of subscribers was not the only problem hat the yearbook staff con­fronted. Seniors \\Quld not cooperate with the staff. We scheduled indi­vidual shots twice but only a few \\Quld shO\ up-- e rechecked schoo les, pas new signs, advertised tl ugh mail, contacted individuals in perso ­still nothing. We scheduled team shots­out of 277 people involved in intra-

Is only 9 showed up. \Ve let seniors pick their O\vn tllne and place-----still nothing. This alone is bad enough, but

he staff itself is partially to blame. e advertising staff did not follow

through ,vi.th their corrmittrrent . The photographers often missed meetings and failed to cover many important events. On top of all this, 60 irre­pI b e shots were destroyed in de­velopi g.

~ s said that every cloud has a silver lining; well, this cloud seems pretty dark. Perhaps the silver lining is the tiroo this year's staff can now devote to next year's book or the lesson every­one can learn fram the lack of interest that lesulted in this year's cancella­tion. Your IIDney will be refunded (as cheetfully as possible) at the Activities Office. Alan Eicher

FFA OFFlCERS-- istrict 12 I~ effie rs OIl be hos ted at AT! far. 22 for an

Office Training cour e r 11:30a.m bo t tude ts fran allover 0 io ri 1 t nd