SynDns recently. Sh
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
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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.
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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.
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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
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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