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BULLE California State Polytechnic College Volumn 19, ·Number 15 · San Luis Obispo November 13, TALENT SHOW WILL CLIMAX INTERNATIONAL WEEK FESTIVITIES A two-night run of the traditional International Talent Show, scheduled for Friday and Saturday (Nov. 15 and 16) in the Cal Poly Theater, will climax annual Interna­ tional Week activities on campus. Also scheduled during the week-long observance, which is arranged and sponsored by the campus International Council, are other pro­ grams including a soccer game between African and Latin American teams, dinner fea- . turing an international menu in the Student Dining Room, and a program of foreign documentary motion pictures. The week-long observance opened with an International Folk Dance Festival Saturday and Sunday (Nov. 9-10) under sponsorship of the Physical ·Education Department. Col­ lege students from throughout California participated in festival activities in Crandall Gymnasium. Registration and a get-acquainted party took place Saturday afternoon. First event of those actually sponsored by the student International Council was a reception for foreign and American students hosted by the campus chapter of Alpha Zeta honorary society for agricultural students. It was held last night (Tuesday, Nov. 12) in the Staff Dining Room. Next on the schedule is the motion picture program this evening (Wednesday, Nov. 13) at 8 p.m. in the Theater. Admission is free. Thursday (Nov. 14) will feature a menu of such · foods as lamb curry, Hong Kong garden salad, Arab bread, and Mexican cauliflower served in the Dining Hall. The soccer game between teams composed of Cal Poly students from African and Latin American nations is planned for Friday (Nov. 15) at 3 p.m. on the athletic field lo­ cated near the Men's Gymnasium. Admission is free and the public is invited to attend. The International Talent Show· is scheduled for Friday and Saturday evening~ with cur­ tain time at 8 p.m., and will conclude the week's program. The show includes musical variety and entertainment acts by students representing some 12 campus foreign stu­ dent organizations. Tickets for both performances are prieed at $1.50 for adults, 75 cents for students, and 50 cents for children. They are being sold at the Associated Students, Inc., Office at Cal Poly and will be available at the Theater box office prior to curtain each evening. WETTLAUFER ELECTED TO HEAD STAFF SENATE A member of the Audio Visual Department staff who has been at the college since 1960 is the chairman of the recently-formed Staff Senate. Boyd Wettlaufer (Senior Photog­ rapher) was elected to the post during the organizational meeting of the group. Others elected to the Staff Senate's Executive Committee during the meeting were James Neal (Assistant Manager of the Cal Poly·· ro:undation) ·as vice chairman and Mrs • . Mary Smith (Secretary of the Industrial Technology Department) as secretary. · Ex-officio members of the group with voting privileges are Donald s. Nelson (Director of Business Affairs) and Gene E. Brendlin (Manager of :t;he Cal Poly Foundation). Both President Robert E. Kennedy and Harold 0. Wilson (Administrative Vice President) are non-voting ex-officio members of the Executive Committee. • Wettlaufer, who is also -well known in this area for his interests in archeology, formerly served as a member of Cal Poly's Faculty-Staff Council. Before assuming his duties on campus, he worked as an archeologist and_ geplogist. ·.· Immediately before joining the Cal Poly staff he was a field archeologist for the Amerind Foundation of Dragoon, Ariz. Prior to that assignment he was provincial archeologist of Saskatche­ wan, Canada. In addition to presid~ng over meetings of the 37-man Staff Senate, which represents Cal Poly's non-instructional personnel in matters of mutual concern, Wettlaufer will represent that group as a member of the President's Counci!'. PRESIDENT KENNEDY NOTES GROWING NUMBER OF JC TRANSFERS IN STUDENT BODY I f Cal Poly enrollment of students ·who transferred directly from junior colleges is up some 20 per cent over last year, according to President Robert E. Kennedy. Dr. Kenned) told some 126 junior college personnel Friday (Nov. 8) that Cal Poly,' as a state~wide coll~ge, has former students from each of the 80 California community colleges which were in operation last year. Of the 9,711 students currently enrolled, almost a third--3,215--are transfer students from junior colleges in California. The figure represents an increase of 524 students over last year's transfer student enrollment of 2 ,691. .. The 126 faculty members, counselors, and administrators welcomed to Cal Poly for a one-day Junior College Articulation Conference by President Kennedy represent. ~0 of the state's 88 publicly-supported junior colleges. ·.:· Dr. Kennedy pointed out that Cal Poly's transfer agreements with some junior col~ leges--known as "articulation agre~ments"--date back to the early 1940s, although . t~e role of the community college in higher education was not firmly established until. 1960 when the Donohoe Act implemented the Master Plan for Higher Education. He also praised the recent establishment of the Board of Governors of the California Communit) Colleges, of which Dr. Sidney Brossman is the newly-appointed chancellor. Among th~se attending the conference w;ere Dr_. Merlin E. Eisenbise, president-superin­ tendent of Cuesta College, and Dr. John W. Casey, president-elect of Fullerton Junior College. ·M aster of ceremonies' for the opening program of the conference was Dr. Dale lv. Andrel1S (Academic Vice President). MOZART MUSIC SCHEDULED AS HIGHLIGHT OF SYMPHONY CONCERT The first performance of the 1968-69 se~son . by the Little Symphony Orchestta will in• clude works by Mozart, Gabriel Faure, Karl Stamitz, and Henry Cowell. The 40-member orchestra's free public concert will take place Thursday (Nov. 14) beginning at 11 a.m. in the campus Theater. Clifton E. Swanson (Music) will be the conductor. SWanson has chosen Mozart's Masonic Funeral Music as lead piece for the performance, Other music programmed includes Faure's Pelleas and Melisande, Stamitz 1 Clarinet Con­ certo No. 3 in B-flat Major., and Cowell 1 s Hymn and Fuguing Tune No. 16. "The Cal Poly Little Symphony is compesed of a select grqup of musicians, intent on presenting first-rate performances of the best symphonic literature, including rarely-performed works," SWanson pointed out. ''We have taken care to improve the quality as we have increased in size. As a result, Cal Poly now has an organization which can perform difficult orchestral music with surprising perfection." CAL POLY PROVIDES WORDS, MUSIC FOR COUNTY SYMPHONY - Four Cal Poly employees, including three musicians, will contribute to the first con­ cert of the season by the San Luis Obispo County Symphony Orchestra, which will per­ form at 4 p.m. Sunday (Nov. 17) in the Cuesta College Auditorium. The musicians are David W. Cook (Associate Dean, Curriculum and Instruction), viola; Dr. Allen Miller (Mathematics), violin concertmaster; and Robert Butler (Mathematics), first violin. All three have played with the orchestra since ,its inception in 1960, D.r . Miller and Butler are past presidents of the orchestra, and Butler is a former president of t_h e Symphony Association, which supports the orchestra. A main feature of the program is Carnival Of the Animals by Alston Hicks with special verses composed by Mrs. Elizabeth program includes Vorstspiel: Prelude to Der Meistersinger, sohn's Symphony No. 5; The Reformation; and selections from by Mrs. Phyllis Madonna. Saint-Saens, nurrated by. Anderson (English). The Richard Wagner; Mende~s­ The King and I with vocal ...' 200 PERCENT INCREASE IN A I D CONTRIBUTIONS Cal Poly employees have opened their hearts and their pocketbooks in response to the 1968-69 AID-United Givers Campaign. With nearly all reports in, approximately $14,500 has been donated or pledged for the year. This represents a 200 percent in­ crease over last year. President Robert E. Kennedy, in announcing the results of the fund drive, stated that Cal Poly has once again demonstrated its sincere interest in furthering t.he cause of 14 local community activities, as well as a number of speciall} designated charities. ., · ,.. Dr. Kennedy, who was chairman of the campaign among state employees in this area, ex­ pressed special appreciation to the 60 area captains who were each responsible for person."aily contacting a group of Cal Poly employees for the purpose of presenting the AID story. Of the total amount ·contributed, about 87 percent was pledged through payroll deduction plans, with the remaining 13 percent made up from cash donations. Anyone who has not been given the opportunity to participate in the AID cause or who has not turned in his payroll deduction pledge card, may still contribute by contact­ ing the Personnel Office. - 4 - DISTRIBUTION OF NEW ADMINISTRATIVE BULLETINS \ Distribution of three new administrative bulletins has be~n . announced by the office of President Robert E. Kennedy. Among those which have been sent to all department and administrative offices and the chairman of the Faculty-Staff Council are AB 68-12, which relates to administration of conferences, short courses, and other special educational programs; AB 68-13 on coliege-wide committee appointment and operations; and AB 68-14, which discusses institutional studies. I ' Fully titl~d "Interim Guidelines for Administration of Conferences, Short Courses, and· Other Special Educatio~al Programs -," 'AB 68-12 provides direction for all phases of such operations including finances, staffing, and management of such events. Its · provisions were approved by Dr. Kennedy following a recommendation from the President's Council. A,\_~isJ: of the current administratively-appointed college-wide standing committees , is included in AB . 6~-13, 11Guid.elines for College-wide Committee Appointments and Opera­ tions, and List of Current COmmittees." It was approved by the president following recommendations of both the Faculty-Staff Council and the President's Council. Also recommended by the President's Council, AB 68-14, "Policies and Procedures for Conduct of Institutional Studies," establishes a procedure for developing priorities for such studies. It also defines functions and resources' available for use in conducting college generated self-studies designed to improve the effectiveness of instructional and administrative ~p~rations of the college. Copies of all three administrative bulletins have been placed in the Faculty Reading Room of Dexter M~~orial Li~rary ~or ~tudy by members of the faculty and staff. . . ... .· '.( . ,, PRINTING STUDENTS WILL TOUR BAY AREA FIRMS •I 11 ~~·I Students of the Printing Technology and Management Department will spend Nov. 21-22 visiting printing firms and related operations . in the San Francisco-San Jose area. · During the department 's.:annual f,.lLfield trip:, . seniors will spend a full day wit:h. :.'' the manager of a large 'printing plant 'and other students . will visit various· printing businesses. On the second day of the tour, seniors will participate in a seminar provided by the Printing Industries Association of Northern California on various phases of the printing industry. JUDGING TEAMS COP THREE TITLES •- .,;- Three judging teams composed of students of the School of Agriculture have won team championships_. in competition ._ at livestock shows in the past two weeks. Livestock judging teams, including students of the Animal Husbandry Department, won at both . _, the Grand National Livestock Exposition in San Francisco and the Grea·t Western ·· · Exposition and Livestock Show in Los Angeles. Dairy Department students were mem­ bers of the Cal Poly team which won the dairy cattle judging crown at the Grand National. Colleges and universities from California, Oregon, Washington, Arizona, and Wyoming entered teams in the contests. ,. '! .~, ta I 1 ,. 5 STAFF SENATE CHAIRMAN NAMED TO PRESIDENT'S COUNCIL s·taff Senate Chairman Boyd Wettlaufer (Audio-Visual) has been designated as a memher of the President's Council and is expected to begin his representation of .membet's of the college support staff at the next meeting, Monday (Nov. 18). His appointment as a full voting member of the campus-wide council which advises President Robert E. Kennedy was announced by the president last week. Participation on this important deliberative body was planned to provide consulta­ tive liaison between the several elements of the college community," Dr:.-):Kennedy said. "Student, faculty, support staff, and administration join the group decision­ making process through representatives on the council." 11 The president of the Associated Students, Inc., all school and division heads, and the college's two vice presidents are full-fledged members of the President's Coun­ cil. Cal Poly's two ·members of the state-wide Academic Senate of the California State Colleges are regularly-invited visitors; although they are not voting members of the council, they participate in discussions. '.. SPEAKERS 1 ROSTER IS BEING COMPILED As a community service, Cal Poly is preparing a roster of faculty and staff members who are available to speak to off-campus organizations. Organizations will be in­ vited to make arrangements 'tor programs directly with persons who are listed in the roster. Faculty and staff members who wish to present off-campus programs are en­ couraged to submit data to be included in the roster to the Office of Information Services, Adm-210, using the attached form. Participation is strictly voluntary. ~~ I f,·, • Completion of the form attached to this Staff Bulletin will provide the necessary in­ formation to enable community organization program chairmen to select speakers who are qualified to present subject matter of interest to their memberships. The Office of Information Services also frequently has requests from news media· for the names of faculty members knowledgeable in specific fields who can help shed light on some of today's fast-breaking news stories. Faculty or staff members who are qualified to provide such information (although they may or may not wish to offer their services as a speaker) may so indicate on the attached form, which should be returned to the Office of Information Services (Adm-210) by December 10 • DINNER-DANCE WILL BE SOCIAL HIGHLIGHT -- • Friday (Nov. 15) evening's dinner-dance for members of the Cal Poly Women's Club and Cal Poly Staff Club and their guests will highlight campus social activity for 1968­ 69. Theme for the event, which is scheduled for 7 p.m. at the San Luis Obispo Elk's Club, · will be ''Dansk Hostfest." Music will be provided by the Sorenson Family :Band and dress will be cocktail dresses, formals, or "dressy dresses" for ladies and business suits for men. Deadline for purchase of tickets for the event was yesterday (Tuesday, Nov. 12). - . The Cal Poly Staff Bulletin is produced by the Office of Information Services, Admin~ istration 210. Material should be submitted in writing prior to noon on Friday. 1 - 6 ­ PROMINENT ARCHITECTS SERVE AS VISITING LECTURERS Two prominent architects are scheduled as guest lecturers in the School of Architec­ ture next week (Nov. 18-22). William Cody, engaged in private practice in Palm Springs, and Allison Peery, designer of Hemisfair in San Antonio, Texas, complete the list of Fall Quarter visiting lecturers. Five other architects who have completed week-long stays at Cal Poly in recent weeks are Carl Troedsson of Los Angeles; Raphael Soriano of Tiburon, a Fellow of the Ameri­ can Institute of Architects (FAIA); Herman Light, FAIA, of Los Angeles; William Car­ michael of Scotland, who lectured at the University of Virginia before appearing on campus; and Anthony Guzzardo, a San Francisco landscape architect who is consulting landscape architect for development of Cal Poly's campus. In addition to lecturing for School of Architecture classes, guest architect Peery is scheduled to give a lecture Tuesday (Nov. 19) evening beginning at 8 p.m. in the Air Conditioning Auditorium. The lecture is open to faculty, staff, students, and the public without an admission charge. • ENGLISR DEPARTMENT SELECTS ALBEE PLAY FOR NOV. 22-23 STAGING ·' -~~ Pbilywright Edward Albee's version of life in a small Sad Cafe," is the Fall Quarter dramatic presentation will be staged the evenings of Nov. 22-23 in the Cal and production crew under the direction of J. Murray department's faculty. Southern town, "The Ballad of of the English Department. It Poly Theater by a student cast Smith (Senior Instructor) of the Tickets for both Cal Poly performances will be priced at $1.50 ~or the public and $1 for students and children. They will be available for purchase at the Associated Students, Inc., Office in the Temporary College Union . Buiiding on campus. STUDENTS BEGIN PLANNING FOR FARM-CITY WEEK !I I.•• A School of Agriculture student committee has begun plans for the annual Farm-City Week observance, Nov. 22-28, in San Luis Obispo. The observance of national Farm­ City Week will include an equipment parade, window displays, and agricultural and educational exhibitions. ,stan.Uchiyama, a senior crops major from San Jose; is chairman of the student Farm­ City Week commit•teE!. He is being assisted by Lloyd Erlandson, a senior Farm Manage­ ment major from Hilmar; William Griffin, : ·a junior fru.it production major from Napa; and Keith Gorzell, ·a mechanized agriculture major from Lake City. Tentatively, the parade and downtown program will be held on Nov. 23, with the window displays to be in place from Nov. 22 to Dec. 2. Farm-City Week emphasizes urban-rural interdependence. Nationally it is coordinated by the Kiwanis C ubs • he~: Cal Poly Staff Bulletin is produced by the Office of Information Services, Admin­ ·stration 210. Material should be submitted in writing prior to noon on Friday. •I . - 7 - MUSTANG GRIDDERS BEGIN FINAL PORTION OF 1968 CAMPAIGN • A road game against University of California at Santa Barbara's Gauchos this Saturday (Nov. 16) afternoon in Goleta will open the final phase of the 1968 season for Head Coach Joe Harper's Mustang football varsity. They will take a season record that stands at 5 wins and 3 losses after last weekend'stbrilling 22-20 victory over an explosive California State College at Los Angeles 11, into Saturday's contest. The Gauchos, who are now 4-3-1 after losing. 27-21 to University of the Pacific last week­ end, will close their 1968 season with th~s Saturday's game. ' Sports activity on campus is limited as fall teams wind up their seasons and winter teams prepare to open theirs. First of the latter to see action will be Coach Vauchan Hitchcock's wrestlers who host the all-star Athletes-In-Action team in an exhibition match scheduled for 8 p~m., Nov. 22, in Men's Gymnasium. The Athletes­ In-Action team, with several members of the 1968 U.S. Olympic Games team and indi­ vidual national champions on its roster, is expected to provide some of the strongest competition of the season for the Mustang matmen. '"' WHO • • • WHAT • • • WHEN • , , WHERE ? ·? ? Robert J. Rodin (Biological Sciences) : and George Clucas (Director of Research and Development) attended an all-day conference on development and administration of re­ search in Fresno late last month. Dr. Rodin, who is chairman of the college Research Committee, said the event, first of its kind for the California State Colleges, in­ cluded discussions on the role of faculty research as well as talks by representa­ tives of the u.s. Office of Education and the Office of the Chancellor. Paintings by artist Donald B. Williams (Audio-Visual) are the subject of ·an exhibit on display through Dec. 1 in the Security Pacific National Bank, Morro Bay. The . showing includes some waterfront and landscape scenes and is being sponsored by the Morro Bay Art Association. Miss Helen MacKenzie and Miss Pearl Turner (both Library) attended the annual meeting and convention of the California Librar.y Association which took place in San Diego recently. Miss Turner addressed a session on the topic "Academic Librarians Organize for Academic Status" and represented members of the campus library staff at business ~~ssions. Robert F; Hoover (Biological Sciences) is author of an article published in the jo~rnal, Four Seasons. Titled "Two New Orthocarpus Species from the San Joaquin Val­ ley," it describes plants commonly called OWl's Clover. One species, Orthocarpus brevistylus, is from eastern san Luis Obispo County. TURKEY SHOOT .SC~ED1J1!p_ .~LqQIJ'__9_9MMITTEE A golf and ·turkey shoot, something neW for Cal Poiy· staff and ;faculty, is being planned .for Nov. 23 at the Laguna Lake Golf Course, San Luis Obispo, according to Edward Jorgensen, chairman of the Cal Poly Staff Club's Golf Committee for 1968. Scheduled to begin at 10 a.m., the event will include a nine-hole "blind Bogey" golf tournament for all comers. Green fees will be $1.50. Someone, either because of the score he shoots or the number he draws, will win a Thanksgiving turkey. Other prizes will also be awarded, the committee chairman said. , ~~ _,.., . -. - 8 - STUDENTS 1 DRIVE WILL BRING YULE CHEER TO VIETNAMESE CHILDREN A 1960 Cal Poly Agricultural Engineering graduate, Ken Aoyama, now a first lieutenant with the 7th Engineering Battalion, u.s. Marine Corps, in Vietnam, has enlisted the assistance of Cal Poly agricultural engineering and home economics students in "Oper­ ation Handclasp," a project which provides toys, candy, and clothing to Vietnamese children at Christmas time. l The student groups will collect the toys, candy, and clothing on campus during the ~ week of November 18-23. Thirty representatives of the Agricultural Engineering So· ciety and the home economics majors will also canvas the San Luis Obispo community on Nov. 23 to augment the campus contribut~ons. The Christmas gifts will be distrib­ uted by the 7th Engineering Battalion in Vietnam. Richard Jeffery, a senior mechanized agriculture major from Coalinga, is spearheading the drive. Ray Aoyama of Isleton, brother of Ken, an agricultural engineering stu­ dent, is a member of the student group which will conduct the drive. , - FILM FEATURES BLACK EDUCATOR ... ........ _ The faculty seminar on teaching, Thursday (Nov. 14, 3:10 to 4:45p.m., Air Condition­ ing Auditorium), will feature a film on one of America's great teachers as he goes about his work. Howard Mitchell, professor of urbanism at University of Pennsylvani~ is a black American who uses the ghetto as his classroom. Thursday's showing will be the first in a six-film series, Men Who Teach, produced by National Educational Tele­ vision. It will be followed by a discussion and critiques of Professor Mitchell's .methods and techniques. • • POSITION VACANCIES ON CAMPUS SUPPORT STAFF LISTED • Three position vacancies on the support staff of the college have been announced by Milton Piuma (Staff Personnel Officer). Along with others previously listed, they are posted in greater detail on the bulletin board located in the Personnel Office Adm-111, 546-2236). Those described by Piuma are: • Clerical Assistant (Typing) II, Range A ($415-$505). One year experience, high school diploma required. Must have ability to pass General Clerical Test and to type 45 wpm. Vacant Dec. 9, 1968. Records Office, Student Personnel Division. Stock Clerk ($240-$292). Purchasing Office, Business Management Division. Ability to move heavy equipment required. Stocks shelves, maintains ·cardex inventory records, fills office .supply orders. Part-time-·20 hours per week. , Vacant immediately. ,. f Custodian ($435-$530). Custodial Depar~ment, Plant Operations, Business Management Division. Knowledge of methods, materials, chemicals, and equipment required. One year of experience as a janitor or custodian also needed. Vacancies still exist for a Computer Programmer II, Senior Tabulating Machine Opera­ tor, and three Groundsmen. Specifications for these positions, all listed in pre­ vious editions of Staff Bulletin, may also be found on the Personnel Office bulletin board. I tl j - 9 - COMING EVENTS COMING EVENTS COMING EVENTS ' International Week -- Continuing through Saturday, Nov. 16. sored by campus International Council. Annual observance spon­ Bank of America Livestock Seminar -- Continuing through Thursday, Nov. 14, Cal Poly campus and Madonna Inn, San Luis Obispo. Annual seminar for Bank of America officers from throughout California, hosted by School of Agriculture. By invitation. f'.. , f Art Show -- Continuing through Nov. 23, . open hours, Dext'er Memorial Library. Exhibit of three collections of original prints, co-sponsored by College Union Fine Arts Com­ I _,·· mittee and the San Luis Obispo Civic and Fine Arts Association~ Public invited. Foreign Documentary Films -- Wednesday~ Nov. 13, 8 p.m. , Cal Poly Theater. Foreign ~ • ;~;~:::;~:;;;;:;~~:~;;;;;~~::~~:;;:t;t;~:::;.;:::;;:;;;::~:l~!:;;~:;~~~lc .,,: ment. .~ Public invited • Cal Poly Staff Club Luncheon -- Thursday, Nov. 14, 12 noon, Staff Dining Room. Dis­ cussion of Cal Poly's overseas pr-ograms by Howard West and Ray Houston. Members and guests invited. Faculty Seminar on Teaching-- Thursday, Nov. 14, 3:10p.m., Air Conditioning Audi­ torium. Showing and discussion of the first of the Men Who Teach film aeries presen­ ted as part of the campus Faculty Seminar series. Faculty invited. International Soccer-- Friday, Nov~ 15, 3 p.m., athletic field. Game between African and Latin American students sponsored as part of International Week festivities by campus International Council. Public invited. Cal Poly Staff Club-Cal Poly Women's Club Dinner-Dance Friday, Nov. 15, 7 p.m~, Elks Club, San Luis Obispo. Dinner-dance co-spon~ored by Cal Poly Women's Club and Cal Poly Staff Club. By reservation. International Talent Show -- Friday, Nov. 15, and Saturday, Nov. 16, 8 p.m., Cal -P oly Theater. Variety program featuring student talent from other nations, sponsored by campus I_n ternational Council. Tickets, $1.50 general public, $.75 students and chil­ dren'. Intercollegiate Horse Show-- Sunday, Nov. 17, 8 a.m., Collett Arena. Competition between 15 California colleges and universities sponsored by Cutting and Reining ·club. Public invited. · Cal Poly Women's Club Bridge_Section Library, Room 129. Members invited. Monday, Nov. 18, 8 p.m., Dexter · Memorial Cal Poly Women's Club W~lki~&_ Section Tuesday, Nov. 19, 9. a.m., Williams Brothers Market parking lot, San Luis Obispo. 1·L·avel to Avila Beach for regular meeting. Mem­ bers invited. · ~ -~Society of Sigma Xi Meeting -- Tuesday, Nov. 19, 11 a.m., Science Building Room E-29. .~~ t ' , Richard Kregsa will be guest speaker for meeting of campus chapter of Society of Sigma XL Faculty invited • {Continued on Page 10) j COMING EVENTS (Continued from Page 9) Books at High Noon Luncheon -- Tuesday, Nov. 19, 12 noon, Staff Dining Room. Discus­ sion of Paul Roberts' English textbook series by Robert Huot and Dr. Robert Lint~ sponsored by English Department. Public invited. Lecture on Architecture-- Tuesday, Nov. 19, 8 p.m., Air Conditioning Auditorium. Lecture by Allison Peery, designer of Hemisfair, 1968, San Antonio, Tex., sponsored by School of Architecture. Public invi~ed. Contact Screen Seminar --Tuesday, Nov. 19, 8:30p.m., Graphic Arts Building, Print­ ing Technology Laboratories. Seminar in contact screening presented by Du Pont_Com­ pany representatives, sponsored by Printing Technology and Management Department·. Students and faculty invited. Cal Poly Women's Club Foreie Students Section -- Tuesday, Nov. 19, 8 p.m.; Interna­ tional Lounge. Birthday party for Cal Poly foreign students. Members and invited students. Cal Poly Women.' a Club Home and Garden Section --Wednesday, Nov. 20, 9:30 a.m., 215 Highland, San Luis Obispo • . Mrs. Clyde Tucker will discuss dried flower arrangements. Members invited. CSEA Monthly Luncheon -- Wednesday, Nov. 20, 12 noon, Staff Dining Room. Talk on "The Thanksgiving Bird" by Richard I. Leach, during luncheon meeting of cal Poly chapter of California State Employees Association. Members invited. Cal Poly Women's Club Newcomer's Section-- Wednesday, Nov. 20, 8 p.m., De~ter Me­ morial Library, Ro~ 129. Demonstration on holiday gifts and decorations by Mrs. Dan Law. Members invited. '·· College Union Forum-- Thursday, Nov. 21, 11 a.m., Cal Poly Amphitheater. · Dr. Donald W. Hensel speaks on "Students and the New Left.'' Sponsored by College Union Speakers Forum Committee. Public invited. Cal Poly Staff Club Luncheon -- Thursday, Nov. 21, 12 noon, Staff Dining Room. Pro­ gram topic and speaker not available at re~eas e time. Members and guests invited. Varsity Wrestling-- Friday, Nov. 22, 8 p.m., Men's Gym. Exhibition match between Cal Poly varsity and Athletes-In-Action all-star team. Tickets, $1.50 for adult~, $.50 for students and children. ,College Union Drama-- Friday and Saturday, Nov. 22-23, 8:30p.m., Cal Poly Theater. ·The Ballad of Sad Cafe, .P'7oduced by English Department. Tickets, $1.?0 adults, $1 students and children• .•! ." ··~ Var-ai'ty Soccer-- Saturday, Nov. 23, 2 p.m., athletic field. College. Public invited. · Cal Poly vs. Merritt · • he Cal Poly Staff Bulletin is produced by· the Offi ce of Information Services, Admin­ istration 210. Material should be submitted in writing prior to noon on Fr iday. ... - 11 ACADEMIC SENATE ELECTION RESULTS • • I t Results of the election of representatives to fill Academic Senate positions created by adoption of that group's new constitution have been announced by Dr. Corwin M. Johnson (Head, Crops Department) who is chairman of its Elections Committee. Those chosen during the election, which took place during the week of Nov. 1, are: School of Architecture William H. Brown, department heads representative Dell Orey Nickell, elected representative, 3-year term Robert F. Asbury, Jr., elected representative, 2-year term Donald J. Koberg, elected representative, 2-year term John S. Stuart, elected representative, 1-year term School of Applied Arts • • • F. Sheldon Harden, Physical Education Department, 3-year School of Applied Sciences J John J. Lowry, Mathematics Department, 3-year term Library and Audio Visual J .,. f Charles R. Beymer, Library, 2-year term. WHISTLER ART INCLUDED IN CAMPUS EXHIBIT Three prints by the famed American artist James McNeill Whistler are in an exhibit which opened on campus Monday (Nov. 11). They are part of combined exhibit of three collections of original prints which will be shown through Nov. 23 under the joint sponsorship of the College Union Fine Arts Committee and the San Luis Obispo Civic and Fine Arts Association. The exhibit, which the public is invited to attend without admission charge, will be displayed in the foyer of Dexter Memorial Library during regular hours. In addition to the collection of prints titled '~histler and His American Followers," it includes groups of prints representative of the Expressionist and Impressionist schools of art. Each collection includes a total of 12 prints. Organized by the California Arts Commission, prints included in the three collections represent - a variety of artistic media and artists. Open hours for the library are 7:45a.m. to 10 p.m., Monday through Thursday; 7:45 to 5 p.m., Friday; 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturday; and 1 to 10 p.m., Sunday. Office-~£ Adm:~~~ The Cal Poly Staff Bulletin is produced by the Information Services, istration 210. Material should be submitted in writing prior to noon on Friday • .... CAL ORNIA STATE POLYTECHNIC COLLEGE SPEAKERS 1 ROSTER I am interested in being included in the Speakers' Roster of California State Poly­ technic College, San Luis Obispo. Name ------------------------------------------------------------------------­ Position/Title ----------------------------------------------------------. elephone extension ---------Office address ____________________________________T The topics I am available to