omecom1n ctivities - carmine.se.educarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/the...

8
1970 u = to go TO. of booted C 28 in the ced a r own 1 ut in - mwh o lll per rter 's an- n the amp ards ci se 12- 7. mply vely, hav- r ow. pped ying la y- kJ c.k gain fore n to men aave le C- the in as r e.e for : at- re - eat t on nly but , -- VOL. XLX Ed iti on Dura nt, 22, 1970 ;o m j ng Edi ti on N :..> omecom1n ctivities e. vue RE IGNS this w eekend s tartin g with this yea r' s foo t ball ' ·queen, Connie Wilk erson. Other r oy alt y will include the Homecoming queen to be announced at Saturda y's football ga me . 34 Named To 1970 ho 's ho Ed it ion Thir ty-four Southeastern stu- de nts have been named to t he 1970 Wh o' s Who Among Stude nt s In Ameri can Coll eges anrt Unive r s i - •ties lis t. Students nominated fo r the hon- or must have exhibited qualiti es of lea dership , ac ad emic ex ce llen ce and future community usefulne ss. Included on this year 's list ar e Rita J o Alexander, L oco; Lou Ellen Alle n, M orr is; Bill Brewer, . Eufaula, Wi no na Br ow n, D ur ant, and J on Grant , Hugo• C ar ol Grei ss , Sapulpa; Pat . Hamm ons , Hugo; J oy Hearon, Du r- ant; Joe Da le Hogan , Kiowa; an d J oe R. Hogan, Checotah. Lana Howl , Lone Wolf; Paul King, Commanche; Jan e Kirk es , Durant; Thurmond Miles, Ar d- more, and David Mtze. Durant. Dwi gh t Nu c ko lls, Okla. City; Linda Kir by O'Toole, Tulsa; Da lE> Pardue, Bos well; Stanlye P er kins. Blu e; and Ra ymond Ricbards, A rd- mor e. J eannetta Robinson, Soper; Will- iam Ru shin, Fo x; Ri c har d Searle s; Poteau; Ja c ki e Simmons. Baton Rouge, La .. and Zelda Steen, Br o- ken R.1 .:· T ho masS tr ud e, Davi d Wa rol . Y ona W a}'Jni re . Marlill; Sandra Wh tsenhunt , Caddo, a nd .John While. Edmond. An thony Yo he, Har ts hor ne; Lanny Youree, Ar dm o re ; G erald O'Dell, Wltchita Falls, Te x., and M ike Burrage, Antler s . Applications A vailab/e For Overseas Study Scandiltlvian S eminar is now a cc epting appli ca ti ons for it s study abroad pr og ram in De nm ark, Fin - ' land, No r wa y, or Sweden for the ac ademic year 71-72. This li v- ing -and-learning expe rien ce is de- .signed for c olle ge student s, g rad- uates and other adults who want to be c ome part of another culture while ac quiring a se cond language. An initial 3- 4 weeks l anguage c our se , fo ll ow ed by a family s tay, will give the st udent oppor- ttmity to pra c ti ce the language on a daily basis and to s hare in the life of the commtmity. For the major part of the year he is sepa r ated from his fell ow Amer- i can stud ents , living an d studying among Scandinavians at a ••People- 's co ll ege" (r esi dential sc hool f or continuing adult education) or some more spe cialized i ns titution. All s emi nar parti cipants meet at the weeklong Intr oductor y, Mid- year and Final se ssi ons , d uring which the Ame rican and Scandi- na vian program dire c to rs wo rt cl os el y with each student on mat- ter s related to his studies, e x- periences and pr ogr ess. The focus of the pr og ram is the st u- dents independent st udy pr oject in his special field of interest. Parade Set For Saturday; Game Slated 2 p.m . SouthPastPrn's activit it>s wil l off if'iall y hegin F r i- day aftl'rnoon wht>n quPen candi- da t E's arP hono rt>d at a tE>a in thP hnmp of Ka tiE> Slack. dt'an dfwom- Horn t>rom ing Rt>vu p will llP ht>ld in Mont gomery Auditorium a nrt is sponsored by St St>n. alP. It will bPgin at 8 p.m. Thi s yP ar· s rPVU f' will IJt> a full va ri('l}' !'hOw . E n tP rl:ilnmt>nt " iII 1nd udP L;nda .-\bb ott Jncl Linda Spt•nr t' r. Vul'a I musk h) I. o uh t> Huth·r. John Wa ggonPr .. and Gt>o r !( P Stanfi t>ld. I nst rum""n - ta I m US I (' wi II bt> pr nvtdPd by sse s band and th P DixiE> Land Trio cti ,·tpd br JOt' Comt:>rty b\' Cha rliP G rt'l'll and a prudlwtion numl>t>r di rt> l' tt> d anc1 I'!Hl rt't lt-! raphP c1 tw Anch· Rtd - ci)t> will lht> l't'VUP. F orrn P r H onw('omi ng will r t> tur n to !ht> !'> tagP for thb 1970 rt>VUl'. Ad mis sion is twt>nty-five !'t>nt!> anrt wi ll bE> wPll wo r th t he- pr i<'P a CC' Orrti I o Dwi g ht t\ ur kolls . stu- c1ent sE>natt> prPsident and mas tt> r ot ct> r('m t miP!> for the t'Vening. Ho mt:> t·oming revut> will Pn d with the l'hoire of li ve finali s ts f(l r Q UE'Pil. - J nrtges are to he Clark Thom - as, E>dit o rialis t for thP Daily Ok- lahoman, Gen E> Ro chelle, OEA president, and Do t Atkins. sorit>t y ('ditor of th E' Dail y Ardmort>i t t> . QuPPn no minet> s and Ps t·o rt s inr l uc1t> Jani c PS tanglin. Mike Goad. Eps ilon Tau Chi; Glt:>nda McCord, danny ChiC kasaw TowPrs; Do r oth} Va rner. Af ro-Ameri can Student Union; Debbie Krahn, C hu ck Allen, Sigma Tau Gamma; J Pant>tta Robinson. Da vp Cross. DPita ZE>ta : Kay MonrOE> . Bobby Willb ton. Th t> Center. and Linda Hobbs. Leon Doug las , WRA. Also . Karen Smith, M ark Zimmer, Pi Delta Epsilon; Jacky Ha gan. Alpha Si!!- ma Tau; Jai.)Pll English, JOf'l Well- ni tz. Chor alt->; Lynn Monks, Mi k f' Graham. Modern Langll:i gP Club; Ka t hi StansPI, Ma rk H Pndrirks Ke y; CarP}' Pins on, Tommy Pratt . Delta Ch i DPita, and M ar - sha J ur <l an. Thurm ond MilPs. T ht> Go lc1 . Diana Mor !!an. Chip Fox. Ha l- liP Mr Kinn P); Gail Go rski. W .J rrPn Outlaw. AlphJ C:ta Rho; Susan Han- key, Ron Whit akPr. SPnior Class; T om J-..ilpatric-k . J on Livingston. ChorvPttt> s; DebbiP Es tt> s. S<liz. Pi OmP l! a Pi. and Samantha Mit cht!ll. DaiP Par d uE> . Cardtnal Kt-}. Kathy W pll::, . I ukP Sn nh. Rof! - PO <Club; 11Pni s P BushP r !>. Ta \·lor Span I.! I P r . .Pht Si t.! rna E psi I on; J Vdlson, Bill T so odiP. Inrtian H E> ri- ta l! P Cl ub; - Bt>t!y Gr a\ ·. ClarPn t·P BPnson. :'\ or th Hall; Kart>n KnPr. Pa ul Thomas. Alpha Phi 3nll Kat hy Lt>t> LP\\iS. BS l1 . Als o. JJi nie Kin d, Tomm\ StockdJ I('. Sav:l ..: PIIf'!>; Tt>rP sa Ak Prs. Anth on} Capucl'io. Tau Kappa Epsil on; J unP Griffin, Wall v WintPr . ME:'\ C; Ja.nPt Park s, Jamps Dunham. FE- llowship of Ch - ristian Won wn; Phyllis Drew, J <>t> H. Q!!an . Pr es id ents Club; Karen Watson, Haymond Chandler, Sop- homore C lass. and Paula ObPn, K3 ppa Delta P 1. Ann Looney, J ohn Wa g- College Pla yers; Ruth Albin, Jim Cook. SEA ; Donna Haley. Larq McGra\\. Band; Bonnit> PlummPr. Bru ct> Usher. Sigma Kappa; JPanniP Cox. Da i'Ul¥ Wright. Varsity ·•O" Club; Kay Al exander, Gary Bates. Chi Alpha. anti Ruthie Tho mas . Bill Tat t> . Ma gi c Penta gon. Six organizati ons so f ar have I / I Pntered fl oats in Saturdays Hom E coming pa raf! P sc.:hed uled to begi at 10:30 a.m. "Ci rc us"was th th eme cho sen for the Homecornin pa rade and dance this year. Ap pro ximatE-ly ni ne cars will be de co ratt>d for the occasion. T ht namPs of those handed in Uli: far are : Chickasaw To we rs, ca i-: Indian Herita gE> Club, car and fl oat; Si gma Kappa, car and 30 gi rl s; Ta u Kappa E ps il on. c ar , float " Tame thP Rande r s"; Delta Zeta fl oat Are F ly ing High "; Alpha Si gma Tau, float "Dumbo HPads the Parade"; Epsilon Tau Chi. ,·a r " ThP First Circus·•; College Pla yPrs . car; Alpba Psi Omega, c ar; WRA, car, float. The Rangers"; Pi De lta E psi!on. ra r. Judg E's for the parade v.ill be John Cliff. Denison Harold editor , J im Pat E> . editor of the Madill paper and Pa: Bov.·rnan. The homecoming game w ill pit the Sa va ges against the !\orth- Wl '' tern Statt> Ran g ers at 2 p.m. Half-ti mE> activitie s will include p.>rf ormanres from The Gold d rill . tt>am and The Southeast ern band. Home ro ming qu Pen will als o bP announced at this timP. Studint section for !hll> g-ame v.ill be the north end of thP s outh s ide of t he s ta ti i urn. A homPt'oming dance. sp onsor- ed by Student Senate, is sla ted for 8 p.m. in thP field house. " Third Avenue Blues Band", .nationally kn own group. will perform. l'i c- kPt S are $3 with date or alone and bP o btainE-d by any senate mpmber. BULLETIN sse s tudent secl oo for the Homecoming game at 2 p.m. Saturday wi ll be the no rth end of the e ast si de of the stad- ium. The Gold and $C Band -.ill also sit in this sec tion. BEHIND THE CONTROLS again after br inging up the chil dren is Mr s. Elizabeth Mu rph y, avaition had a varied ba ckgr ound in Qytag bef o re coming' to Southeastern including Q ying fo r a frei ght cu rri culum director for SSC, Mrs . Mur ph y has expre ss ventur e. Related s tory on pace se•en.

Upload: lamtram

Post on 24-Feb-2018

213 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: omecom1n ctivities - carmine.se.educarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern/Newspapers/1970... · i, 1970 u = s to go TO. of booted !:C 28 in the .ced a \r • own 1ut in-mwho

i, 1970 u =

s to go TO. of booted !:C 28

in the .ced a \r own • 1ut in-mwho llllper rter's

t an-n the ~ Jamp rards •

rcise 12-7. mply vely, hav-r ow. pped -ying

·lay-kJc.k gain for e n to

men aave leC-

the in a s

re.e for

• :at-re-eat ton nly but

• •

, --

• VO L . XLX HonF~coming Edition Durant, Ol~la., O·~ tober 22, 1970 ;om j ng Edition N :..> • • •

omecom1n • ctivities e.vue •

ROYALT~ REIGNS this weekend starting with thi s year' s football ' ·queen, Connie Wilkerson. Other r oyalty will include the Homecoming

queen to be announced at Saturday's football game.

34 Named To 1970 ho 's ho Ed it ion

• Thirty-four Southeaste rn s tu­dents have been named to the 1970 Who' s Who Among Students In American Colleges anrt Unive r si­

•ties lis t. Student s nominated fo r the hon­

or mus t have exhibited qualities of leadership, academic excellence and future community usefulness. Included on this year' s lis t are Rita J o Alexander, Loco; Lou Ellen Allen, Morris; Bi ll Brewe r ,

. Eufaula, Winona Br own, Durant, and J on Grant, Hugo •

• Carol Grei ss, Sapulpa; Pat . Hammons , Hugo; J oy Hearon, Dur­

ant; Joe Dale Hogan, Kiowa; and J oe R. Hogan, Checotah.

Lana Howl, Lone Wolf; Paul King, Commanche; Jane Kirkes, Durant; Thurmond Miles, Ard-

more , and David Mtze . Durant. Dwight Nuckolls , Okla. City;

Linda Kirby O'Toole, Tulsa; DalE> Pardue, Boswell ; Stanlye Perkins. Blue; and Raymond Ricba rds, Ard­mor e.

J eannetta Robinson, Soper; Will­iam Rushin, Fox; Richard Searles; Poteau; Jacki e Simmons. Baton Rouge, La .. and Zelda Steen, Bro­ken R.1.:·

ThomasStr ude, Oktnt.l~~e. David Wa rol. ~otcaa; Yona Wa}'Jni re. Marlill; Sandra Whtsenhunt , Caddo, and .John While. Edmond.

Anthony Yohe, Ha rtshor ne; Lanny Youree , Ardmore; Gerald O'Dell, Wltchita Falls, Tex., and Mike Burrage , Antlers .

Applications A vailab/e •

For Overseas Study Scandiltlvian Seminar is now

accepting applications for its study abroad program in Denma rk, Fin­

' land, Nor way, or Sweden for the academic year 71-72. This liv­ing-and-learning experience is de-

. signed for college s tudents, grad­uates and other adults who want to become part of another culture while a cquiring a second language.

An initial 3-4 weeks language course , followed by a family s tay, will give the student oppor­ttmity to practice the language on a daily basis and to share in the life of the commtmity. For the major part of the year he is

separated from his fellow Amer­ican students, living and studying among Scandinavians at a • • People ­' s college" ( residential school for continuing adult education) or some more specialized insti tution.

All seminar participants meet at the weeklong Intr oductor y, Mid­year and Final sessions, during which the American and Scandi­navian pr ogram directors wort closely with each s tudent on mat­ters related to his s tudies, ex-periences and progress. The focus of the program is the stu­dents independent study project in his special field of interest.

Parade Set For Saturday; Game Slated 2 p.m.

SouthPastPrn's Homprumin~ activitit>s wil l offif'iall y hegin F r i­day aftl' rnoon wht>n quPen candi­datE's arP honort>d at a tE>a in thP hnmp of Ka tiE> Slack. dt' an df wom-~>n.

Horn t>rom ing Rt>vup will llP ht>ld in Montgomery Auditorium a nrt is sponsored by St ud~.nt St>n. alP. It will bPgin at 8 p.m. Thi s yPar·s rPVUf' will IJt> a full va ri('l}' !'hOw.

E ntP rl:ilnmt>nt " iII 1nd udP ft~l k ~one~ h~ L;nda .-\bbott Jncl Linda Spt•nr t' r. Vul'a I musk h)

I. ouht> Huth·r . J ohn WaggonPr .. and Gt>or!(P Stanfit>ld. I nst rum""n ­ta I m USI (' wi II bt> prnvtdPd by sse s sta~P band and thP DixiE> Land T rio cti n·,·tpd br JOt' H~an.

Comt:>rty b\' Cha rliP G rt 'l'll and a prudlwtion numl>t>r di rt>l' tt>d anc1 I'!Hlrt' tlt-! raphPc1 tw Anch· Rtd ­ci)t> will hl~hlil!ht lht> l't'VUP.

F orrn P r H onw('om i ng qut>t>ll~ will r t> turn to !ht> !'>tagP for thb S~Clal 1970 rt>VUl'.

Admission is twt>nty-five !'t>nt!> anrt wi ll bE> wPll wor th the- pri<'P a CC' Orrti n~ I o Dwight t\ ur kolls. s tu­c1ent sE>natt> prPsident and mastt> r ot ct> r('m tmiP!> for the t'Vening.

Homt:>t·oming revut> will Pnd with the l'hoire of li ve finali s ts f(lr QUE'Pil.

-

J nrtges are to he Cla rk Thom ­as, E>dit orialist for thP Daily Ok­lahoman, GenE> Rochelle, OEA president , and Dot Atkins. sorit>t y ('ditor of thE' Daily Ardmort>i tt>.

QuPPn nominet>s and Pst·orts inr luc1t> Jani cPStanglin. Mike Goad. Eps ilon Tau Chi; Glt:>nda McCord, danny Wri~ht. ChiCkasaw TowPrs; Dor oth} Va rner . Afro-American Student Union; Debbie Krahn, Chuck Allen, Sigma Tau Gamma;

J Pant>tta Robinson. Da vp Cr oss. DPita ZE>ta : Kay MonrOE>. Bobby Willbton. Tht> Cente r. and Linda Hobbs. Leon Douglas, WRA.

Also. Karen Smith, Mark Zimmer , Pi Delta Epsilon; J acky Hagan. Ronni ~ Bradl~r. Alpha Si!!­ma Tau; Jai.)Pll English, JOf'l Well­ni tz. Choralt->; Lynn Monks, Mikf' Graham. Modern Langll:igP Club; Kathi StansPI, Ma rk HPndrirks

• Blu~ Key; CarP}' Pinson, Tommy Pratt . Delta Chi DPita, and Mar ­sha J ur<lan . Thurmond MilPs. Tht> Golc1.

Diana Mor!!an. Chip Fox. Ha l­liP Mr KinnP); Gail Gorski. W.J rrPn Outlaw. AlphJ C:ta Rho; Susan Han­key, Ron WhitakPr. SPnior Class; Tom J-..ilpatric-k . J on Livingston. ChorvPttt>s; DebbiP Es tt>s. Ros~ S<liz. Pi OmPl!a Pi . and Samantha Mit cht!ll. DaiP ParduE>. Ca rdtnal Kt-}.

Kathy Wpll::,. I ukP Snnh. Rof! ­PO <Club; 11Pni sP BushPr!>. Ta \·lor Span I.! I P r . .Pht Si t.! rna E psi I on; J ~y<·P Vdlson, Bill TsoodiP. Inrtian HE> ri­ta l!P Club; - Bt>t!y Gra\·. ClarPnt·P BPnson. :'\ or th Hall; Kart>n KnPr. Pa ul Thomas. Alpha Phi O~ega , 3nll Kathy F:irn~t•r. Lt>t> LP\\iS. BS l1.

Also. JJinie Kind, Tomm\ StockdJ I('. Sav:l..:PIIf'!>; Tt>rPsa AkPrs. Anthon} Capucl'io. Tau Kappa Epsilon; J unP Griffin , Wall v WintPr . ME:'\C; Ja.nPt Parks , Jamps Dunham. FE-llowship of Ch­ristian Wonwn; Phyllis Drew, J <>t> H.Q!!an . Presidents Club; Karen Watson, Haymond Chandler, Sop­homore Class. and Paula ~ewell, ~ul ObPn, K3ppa Delta P 1.

Jan~ Ann Looney, J ohn Wag-~oner . College Players; Ruth Albin, Jim Cook. SEA; Donna Haley. Larq McGra\\ . Band; Bonnit> PlummPr. Br uct> Usher. Sigma Kappa; JPanniP Cox. Dai'Ul¥ Wright. Varsity ·•O" Club; Kay Alexander, Gary Bates. Chi Alpha. anti Ruthie Thomas. Bill Tat t>. Magic Pentagon.

Six organizations so far have

I / •

• •

I

Pntered fl oats in Saturdays HomE coming pa raf!P sc.:heduled to begi at 10:30 a.m. "Ci rcus"was th theme chosen for the Homecornin pa rade and dance this year. Ap proximatE-ly nine cars will be de coratt>d for the occasion. Tht • namPs of those handed in Uli : far are: Chickasaw Tower s, cai-: Indian HeritagE> Club, car and float; Sigma Kappa, car and 30 gi rls; Ta u Kappa Epsilon. car, float " Tame thP Rande rs"; Delta Zeta fl oat "Sava~Ps Are F lying High"; Alpha Sigma Tau, float "Dumbo HPads the Parade"; Epsilon Tau Chi. ,·a r " ThP First Ci rcus·•; College Pla yPrs. ca r ; Alpba Psi Omega, car; WRA, ca r , float . · ·c a~P The Rangers"; Pi Delta E psi! on. r a r.

JudgE's for the parade v.ill be John Cliff. Denison Harold editor, J im PatE>. editor of the Madill paper and Pa: Bov.·rnan.

The homecoming game will pit the Sa vages against the !\or th­Wl''tern Statt> Rangers at 2 p.m. Half- ti mE> activities will include p.>rformanr es from The Gold drill . tt>am and The Southeastern band. Homeroming quPen will also bP announced at this timP. Studint section for !hll> g-ame v.ill be the north end of thP south side of the s tatii urn.

A homPt'oming dance. sponsor­ed by Student Senate, is slated for 8 p.m. in thP field house. " Third Avenue Blues Band", .nationally known group. will perform. l'ic ­kPtS are $3 with date or alone and rna~ bP obtainE-d by any senate mpmber.

BULLETIN

sse s tudent secloo for the Homecoming game at 2 p.m. Saturday will be the north end of the east side of the s tad­ium. The Gold and $C Band -.ill als o sit in this section.

BEHIND THE CONTROLS again after bringing up the children is Mrs. Elizabeth Murphy, avaition

had a varied background in Qytag before coming' to Southeastern including Qying for a freight

curriculum dir ector for SSC, Mrs. Murphy has express venture. Related s tory on pace se•en.

Page 2: omecom1n ctivities - carmine.se.educarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern/Newspapers/1970... · i, 1970 u = s to go TO. of booted !:C 28 in the .ced a \r • own 1ut in-mwho

Two THE SOUTHEASTE Oklahoma

••• By REN SMITH

Make a loau city checlc tbe new dorm elevators. . ~~ ... '

getting later and later for da es. • •••

Place a camp~s wide ban on \he midi skirt.

Turn the air !Conditioning off or up in Morrison Hall so a few classes can be held. 1

. I ••• Soundproof rooms in the d9rms for co-eds that want to study or get to sleep earlier than midnight.

••• Have washers and dryers in the dorms, so a person won't have to wear dirty cl<thes to the laundry mat.

•••• Series of l~dtures by S:W.L.C.O.W. (Students Who Leave Campus On Weekends) 1011 the tlve easy ways to pack a s uitcase. ... Add an extra tray disposal in the cafeteria, students don't really mh1d not haVing a place tb sit, but wben t.bey have to stand in line to put their t~y up something needs to be done.

••• Attend Homecoming Saturdi.y at 2 p.m~ Might look bad if North-western bas more people there than we do.

By DWIGH(I' NUCKOLLS As all of you should alr~ady

know, HOMECOMING 19'10 is upoo us. Homecoming is kicked-off • by tbe Homecoming Revue at 8~.m. Friday inMootgpmery Auditor\)JID. Admission willl be 2~. Surely you can afford( a .quarter to 1 see some of the best -looking women, and best ente nment tn this part

of tha stadium for 3 reasons: (1) TO YElLL and upset the other tea.p1, (2) prevent crowding and (3) IT'S CLOSER to the field because the track runs behind the stadium.

- .9f the country. I .....u... Tbe' Homeco ing Parade s~rts

Final punch to the Homecoming weekend is the HOMECOMING DANCE. The Third Avenue Blues band will be playing. It will be from 8 until midnight and the cost Will be $3 stag or drag. The Student Senate, as well as the fac­ulty would like to ask "please no alcdlolic beverages in the gym."

I

I

at 10:30 a.m. aturday. Theme for the l)arade is "Circus.'' I

Next come$ the most impor­tant feature of Homecoming,! the f0,9tl9Jl Qme. Tbe student body ts urge9 to s1 oo the east side

' •

f

\

0 I I I

.

See YOU at the Homecoming activities!

N I(A PUS

. '

•• ,,. - .. --- -:" ·

~-

. -

·-·CCJCfi!---THAT YOU "'ttlCR lNSTRUCrt>~--ouctt-­

ll-1~ ttt~TITUTt~."

·-' -Student newspaper of SO\lttK~s1tern State College, Durant, Okla-

homa. Published1every Thu except durhig holldaysand exa-mination periods Second postage paid a:t Durant, 9klahoma '14'101.

Subscription Editor-in-Chief ....... . .. Assistant Editor, . • • • •••

for academic: year ............. Lou E lien Allen • • ••••••••.••• • • Ellen Monk

• Karen Smith Sports Editor . • • • • • •• ~ ••.•••.••• ~ ••••• Ron Sharp Circulation Manager . . • • • .. • · .••••••• . •••• Frank Albin Head Photographer • .- ••••••••••••••• •• ~ ••• Steve Barker Photographer ••• • -:. • • • • • • • •••••••••• Dennis WUleford .Adviser • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••• Kenneth Nichols

Letters To The Editor

ava To The Editor.

Is winning everything? TtUs i~ the question that comes to my min(\ during a football season like Southeastern is now experiencing. Arter the defeat by Langston,many peq>le are saying Southeastarn now has no chance to win a game. Thi.s could very well be true.

In spite of the season South­eastern has, 1 would like to say that there are many people around here that are behind these young men 100 per cent, because we know these young men and we admire them.

I have had many of these play­ers in my classes throughout the years, and I personally feel that in general they are very outstand­ing young men. As I think back, names come to my mind such as Tony Rush, Bob Wilmoth, Char­lie Barnhart, Jimmy Jones, Terry Davis, Donnie McVay, Paul Pool and Gary Jones. These were not only great football players, but also outstanding students.

I read an article recently where the Penn State football coach was quoted as saying, "The worst trend that athletics has taken in recent years is that far too many· athletes are not graduating." I 'm sure this statement is correct.

As Faculty Athletic Repres ­entative to the Oklahoma Collegiate Conference I know to what lengths some schools will go in order to play any "tramp" athletic that might come along. This is not the case at Southeastern. All of the young men mentioned above have graduated and are very out­standing citizens. This would really he great , but things like this just don't show up when a team loses on the field. I am con­fident that the primary aim of Southeastern's coaching staff is that the athelte make his grades and graduate. I assure you• I would much rather be associated with this type of student athlete.

Some of the players I know on this year's team. to name a few, are David Williams. Ronald Loften

' Gerald O'Dell, Tommy Strode, Billy Bonner, Ernest Crain, David Twidell, Glen Pool, and Glen Black. I have had them in class, I've been

CRITIC By MIKE BJUDY

Considering the stagnated set­ting, the absence of actual 2udible background sensations. th2 lack of any elaborate mechanical imple­ments which might have added to the charismati c aspects and a mediocre ploy, it is a true tri­mediocre plot , it is a true tri­bute to all three actors for any success the play might enjoy. Gen­erally speaking, it was an above average production.

I foundMr. Livingston's per­formance exceptionally well done; his voi ce fluctuations and absence of melodramatic fantasy were def­initely needed in sustaining clarity and order between the cast and audience. Without this return to normalcy. I am afraid tne play would have broken down to a simple shouting match between Miss Looney and Mr. Groom.

I am afraid both Miss Looney and Mr. Groom were guilty of rushing the scenes, overacting and grossly () wr -vocalizing. For that matter, the entire play was overly rabid; not one scene es­caped the fanatical shouting which created fallacious climaxes and unnecessary breaks.

If the play were moderately ton­ed down with fewer nareups in certain places 'it would have re­sulted in a more exacting mood. Too ~uch of this rapid overacting was certainly incongruous to the entire effect of the play.

There were a few otber dis­turbing factors. For one, the part

·of the practical fundamental cbau-

~

fl on trips with them, and I feel I know what caliber of young men they are. They are the type you would lik& your son to grow up to be. They too will graduate ~d be successful citizens.

·so I ask again is wfnning every­tbing? No. I don't think it is. Sure it's nice to win, but there's more to it than that. Southeastern will have some winntng seasons and some losing seasons. This happens to be the latter. 1 was compelled to write this article because there are so many people who share the same views that I do. I hope this will somehow give the boys a boost when they need one so badly.

Don B. Hazell Faculty Athletic Representative

To The Editor: . Earlier this semester a group

of students were requested.not to play frisbee on the front campus lawn because the college has 9egWl a beautification program which includes the installation of a sprin­kler system, re-sodding andgrass seeding on bare areas of the cam­pus. Students have been request­ted to refrain from playing foot­ball on the front lawn for the same reasons.

Other areas a re available lar frisbee throwing, footba ll playing, lotus smelling or any other hang up that we may have. There are even places for those that like to study and for those who appreciate the opportunity to ob­tain a college education.

Signs have been surreptitious­ly appearing on campus hinting that frisbee throwers are being discriminated against. This is not true. The rule applies to everyone and the vocal minority shoul:cl not be allowed special pri­vileges. Sign painting and posting by dark of night will not help your cause.

Apparently all students on cam­pus are vitally interested in ob­taining an education or they would not have paid the cost of tuition • room, board, etc. Education is expensive; so is maintaining a physical plant. The value of the degree is to

R .

manistic Sophie Hauschmeyer was distracting and annoying. One could guess with perfect accuracy her next move or callow reaction to a certain eveny.

I mean typing and acting out your characterization is one thing, but · it got ridiculously simple to remain one step ahead of the en­tire play. .This is terribly dis­concerting to anyone who might view the play. I came expecting to see a realistic comedy explain­ing the· trials and tribulations of two struggling protestors hap­hazardly involved in a love triangle

Instead, I saw this puerile venture into the fantasy world of never, never land with sugar and spice and everything nice. It is a well accepted theory that for something to appear funny doesn't necessarily constitute the fact that ~ bas to be remidial or simple. Oh well, chalk another one up for the pragmatist.

Generally speaking again, the . comedy ranged from good in some places to frightfully dull in'others. The actors were well rehearsed but failed in my opinion to actually get inside their characters. The play did bog down in one or two places but was bacically very steady and did maintain one's in­terest.

The audience was very re­ceptive and most found it very humorous. On a whole, those who attended the play were adequately staisfied. So at least in this one aspect they did accomplish their aim.

OctOber 19'70

t

great extent determined by wbat others thnk of the instirutton con­ferring it. By creating dissention and di~tur~ng tt-te rights or otb­ers, we are not adalng fo fbe val­ue of the degree that we are on the other hand so ardently per­suing •

This is an appeal to order • and harmonious relations on cam­pus. It behooves each and every one of us due to our tremendous • investment of time and money to boost the college and its pol­icies in any way we can. Awn: ter once said, as long as we are a member of an organtaation we should be loyal to it. Once out-. side, we may coodemn to our hearts content, but as loog as we are part of it, to critictze is to c riticize ourselves. Loyalty is an outstandibg virtue.

lrby E. Marchant

'S1Udent Outlet' Goal Of VN_A Exhibition

"Art for art's sake" hfls taken on a new meaning here at South­eastern with the formatton of a group of Very Interested, Very Activ~-VIVA--art students.

A new art club just established viva, has as its goal "to. be an outlet for students who want to get involved in art," according to the· club director, Nancy Weaver, Ida­bel seniot. "We want to form a club that could get something . done .•.•• that wouldn't get bogged down with red tape and all." The club is sactioned by the 'college and is being advised by Max McClendon, art instructor.

Miss Weaver announced tlle club' s first project: a stahl -wide art exhibit to be held November 1·14. The exhibit will be housed in Morrison Hall with some $500 in cash prizes to be awarded. •

Prize money was gathered by VIVA through donations from in­dividuals and institutions across

• the state. "Everyone we've talk-ed with has donated something," s miled Miss Weaver, "and we're encouraging sales at the exhibit."

College students are the main contestants in the exhibit, which is to become an annual event. A-ccording to Miss Weaver. there is no art exhibit in this area especially for college students, and the ·club is sponsoring the first event to fill this need.

Exhibit is open to students. from all the state colleges i n Ok­lahoma, with a limit of 5 entrants from each school who may enter up to 3 of the five divisions to be offered. The five divisions to be s hown include: all-painting media; s culpture; graphics and drawings; crafts dealing with metals, .weav­ings, textiles . and ceramics; and,· mixed media.

Entry fee is $4 per person and· the Yaried works will be judged by • well-known sculptor and painter Paul Maxwell of Dallas. Thus far, • entries have come from Central State College, OCLA, East Central, · Northeastern, and Southwestern. Miss Weaver expects up to 15i pieces to go on display.

VIVA lists some 16 members thus far. and is open to any stu:; dent interested in art, regardless of major.

Janet Kilpatrick, Durant Sen­ior, is treasurer for the group which includes: Bill Groom, Paris junior; Kurt Bole~ Del qty jun­ior; Larry McCauly, Durant juniOI Danny White, Okla. City junior; Susan Jones, Durant senior; Mike Chalk, Durant senior; Dianne

• Wood, Caddo sophomore, Betty Hammett, Okla. City sophomore; Steve Rogers, Duncan freshman; Paul King, Ardmore senior; Kay Alexander, Loco senior;, Ron Jones, Ardmore, jlll\fot; . Vicki Burkhalter. Durant sophOmore; Jerry Rice, Durant sophomore.

.fu

'· J

F •

one . 10ns ulty

. yeat

aid SCQI:

to • repr stud• istr~ and ing I

• in OJ

.. in tt SAF

fa cui is th an no take1 big I Foru prob

t'o forun elect istra sevet the s SEI'V€

four each

1 ThurJ chair ash a Ellen retar • alive: junioJ ior, 'ior.

F a se

· Andr1 educa

· profe

• as sis• and I

· ctor .

N Dr. J: fesso: Robin \!hem! EngliJ

L~ year :

• CUSSlD

TL ·Sy

Pro on the servic« by USI

I TUSC A.M.M•

• the oo11 • to my is opel ulty."

The bank h copies researt wide r:

• this inl goverru cently.

"MI •

Page 3: omecom1n ctivities - carmine.se.educarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern/Newspapers/1970... · i, 1970 u = s to go TO. of booted !:C 28 in the .ced a \r • own 1ut in-mwho

2, 1970

ry what ln con­sentioo

)( .oth­le val­are on y per-

order· 1 cam-every

~ndoos • money s pol-\. wrt: ve are on we ~ OUt•

::> our as we is to cy is

chant

oal •

1011 taken :>uth-of a

Very

.shed · an :o get o the· lda­rm a thing . gged The

!lege Max

t!Je wide :1ber used ;so6

• ' by

in-70SS

• alk-lg, " ~·re . t ' , l . . 1a1n lich nt. ere rea and r st

1ts. )k-nts .ter · be be

lia; gs; lV ­

nd • ,

Uld . by . ter 1r, • al al, · rn. 59

·rs u-

• ss

n­up ·is n-01 • t

ke ne tY e; n· t lY )0

ld

• •

Ease Three THE SOUTHEASTERN, Durant, Oklahoma October 22, 1970

'70Student -F acuity Forum In Operation

The newest most unique and one of the strongest organizat­ions oh campus, the Student-Fac­ulty Forum has begun its second

why's and how's and then making recommendations as to what could be dooe .to remedy bad situations.

. year of operation.

Included in the things brought before the Forum and later im­proved were Shearer Hall, Vet Vlllage and dress regulations.

Begun in September 1969 to aid Southeastern in it's entire scope of activities from academic to extra-curricular, the Forum represents an eagerness on the

• student body, faculty and admin­istration to advance Southeastern and to make it the most outstand­ing institution of higher education

• in Oklahoma. "The Forum acts as the bridge

in the communication gap between SAF (students, administration and

faculty)" , says one member. ,.It i s the little things on campus that annoy all of us, and if these are taken care of i n the infant stage, bi g problems won't develop. The Forum is the place to discuss any problems or would-be problems.''

Fourteen members constuue tne forum with seven students being elected by the faculty and admin­istratien to serve for one year, and seven faculty members elected by the student body. Faculty members serve for two years, with threeand four respectively being replaced each '~lear.

The '70-'71 Forum includes Thurman Miles, Ardmore senior , chairman, Rodney Bivens, Chick-

• asha senior, co- chairman, and Ellen Monk, Denison junior , sec­retary. Other student represent ­atives include Ron Jones, Ardmore junior, Marsha Jordan, Caddo sen­ior, and Jon Grant, Hugo sen­"ior.

· Faculty members serving for a second term include Charles

• Andrews, assistant professor of education; Dr. Ed Byrd, associate

• professor of history; Jack Dye, assistant professor of business,

• and Uavid Rich, English instru-

• ctor.

Newly elected faculty include Dr. James Harmon, assistant pro­fessor of technology; Dr. Jack Robinson, assistant professor of c,;hemistry, and Howard Starks, English instructor.

Last year's Forum spent the year seeking out problems, d1i­cussingthem and finding out the

"One good example," said Jack Dye, "and one of the first things brought before the Forum was the desire of girls to wear slacks to class, especially in cold weather. The Forum agreed that there seemed to be an unwritten law on dress r egulations. a trad­itional, unbreakable code of what was, or was not "proper." The· Forum agreed that possibly tbe real question was not prope1attire so much as the purpose ofthe pr o­per r ole of the college in a student's life, whether it had only education ­al value or whether it was expected to exert p:lrental and mor al influ­ences as well."

At that time, Charles Andrews said " I personally would prefer my students to wear shoes to class, but I'm not at all sure he need be terribly concerned with my per­sonal preference if he feels going barefoot will contribute· to his ful­fillment."

A committee was appointed to look into dress codes and the ban on the unwritten " no slacks to class law" was done away with.

The Forum's basic princi ­ples are sound, and members are eager to serve. The only ingredi­ent lacking in the development?! its enormous potential is active parti ­cipation from the body it serves. The For urn cannot ~nvestigate ex­isting problems nor take initiative on new innovations unless such in­formation is available that would point out such needs to the gr oup

TbE> student body must, of nec­essity, become the Forum's ttfe­line. This can be done by per­sonally addressing the group or by presenting ideas to any member M the group.

The For urn will meet in the President's conference room on the nrst and third Tuesday at 3 p.m. All students and faculty are invited to bring their problems be­for e the group, to participate in discussions. or just to sit i n on the meeting.

TUSC Offers Microfiche ·System On SSCCarnpus

Providing a microfiche system on the sse campus is part of the services offered by the Technolo­by Use Studies Center (TUSC). , TUSC Industrialist Specialist, A.M.Moore, e~plains, "This is

• the only small college to ~ them to my knowledge. The service is open to all students and fac­

. ulty. " The information center or data

bank has approximately 600,000 copies of the latest government research documents, covering a wide range of topics. Some of

• this information was classified government information until re­cently.

.. MlcroQche rolllm) ser-•

vicets sponsored by the Technology UtiUzation Divisioo of NASA and it exists to tlnd ways to transfer to the public those technical or scientific findings of the nation's total research effort and espec­ially aer ospace research," quotes Bill Dodd, TUSC industrial speci­alist.

The microfiche system en­ables a maximum of 35 pages of printed mater ial to be photograph­ed on one 4 X6 card. This gov­ernment standardized microfilm i s then viewed through reader s. These reader s are kept in the T USC office but can be loaned to stu­dents who need to use them over-

STEAKLEY •

I

COMPANY

• )

CLOOING ALL GAPS between students, facul ty and administration that may exist is the gQal of the Student-Faculty Forum. The Forum ts·

in its third year at sse, and bas much credit to its name. Hopes for its cootinued useful­ness gr ow steadily.

Instruments Director Talks To Phi Beta Lambda Members

Ken Griffin, personnel dir­ector of Texas Inst r uments, was guest speaker at the last meeting of Phi Beta Lambda, business fraternity.

Gri ffin spoke on management and told of the difficulties that staff managers have with the com­pany objectives as opposed to the problems experienced by line man­agers in meeting these .

He told of management by the objective, strategy, and tactics method. The strategy was clear­ly and seperately defined to acc ­omplish the objectives that were quite lengthy and detailed. The objectives were naturally a bus­iness position which might be , for example, th r ee billion dollars worth of new ser Vice business, or a percentage penetration • of new markets and types of markets available 10 years from now.

Griffin said that it i s very appar ent that when under graduate management personnel apply for a JOb with i ndustry, they are ve ry well informed i n all aspects of line management. He said that the choice of going from staff. to line or vice-versa after entry i s almost non-existant.

Technology seems to flow or filter down thr ough industry. Advances in the aerospace i ndus­t r y eventually find thei r way i n­to other manufacturing methods. He said that in a service or gan­ization, there i s not much diff­erence in line and staff

~2nd. Term'

ment. He disc11ssed industries meth­

od of determining th.e net p r ofit margin and how the cost of mat­erials, labor. over head, staff sal­aries, and advertising are comb­ined with plans to meet the com­pany objectives. All plans and costs have to mesh 100% in order to achieve the nPt profit margin. He said the management learning curve , about a new product, must increase as competition for­ces the prime .curve down in order to maintain the necessar y margin of profit. As management learns ways to dr op casts, th~ pric~ will also drop due to competition.

Gri ffin ·stated that new mana­gers and engineer s starting out usually seek jobs in resear ch and development instead of product management or production line management because they l earn that manufacturing i s conducted 24 hours per day and someone has to manage the night shift.

c

He said there is a wide opeu field in manufacturing line man­agement. He said tbat TI recru­its on 192 c.ampuses including Southeastern.

He said women were getting inter ested in college management courses and that there were many openings for women in the field of managemenl

The next meeting is scheduled for November ) I.

\

CLOTHIERS For the Latest in Men's Styles

210 W. Main

WA-4 0803

7

, '

n c_ - - -

FIRST NATIONAL /BANK

I I ... 0 U " A N T

• •

..

'

Page 4: omecom1n ctivities - carmine.se.educarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern/Newspapers/1970... · i, 1970 u = s to go TO. of booted !:C 28 in the .ced a \r • own 1ut in-mwho

DISC~G S'MJDENT with bis see- "student-oriented," and continually strlves for better means ot closing the commwlications gap between students and faculty.

Sally Clark. is Dr. Ernest dean ot in-structioo for SSC. Dr. Sturcb ~011 :lde1rs himself

Deari Southeastern State College,

of the fastest growing state leges in Oklahom~ is being r i•n

by young men and women are brimming with new ideas, and who maintain adirect tie-line bet­ween the administration, facul~ and students. One 1ot these m~ is "Dr. Ernest Sturch, Jr., wtio

I

became Dean of Instruction ~n August 1969. I

A Southeastern graduate, Dr. Sturch re~eived his BS in 1951, his Masters of Science and. ~s PhD from the UniveJ"sity of 0~­homa in 1953 and 1956. Follo~­iq-g- his graduation from OU, Dean Sturch returned to Southeastern as a physical science i~structor and has been on campus since that time, with the exception of one year when he vsor-ked as a' chemist for th~ Oak Ridge National Laborator}l.

''I missed academic life too much to stay away, •• said Sturch, "so I returned to campus."

The most satisfying thing about his job, can be summed up in two words - the students. "I am stu-•

Ent usiastic .

a nstruction policy aDd any student ·or faculty member ls welcome in any of our offtces at any time. Not only do we listen to suggestions, we en­courage this. Much of our success is the close student-teacher relat­ionships and the informality that prevails."'

''No suggestion is too small, nor any problem too big that we can't sit down, discuss the issue thor­oughly and try to work out a sol­ution or take action."

" All of us at Southeastern are lucky. There is an administration that cares, a faculty who wants to understand, and a student body who is willing to learn. In a day of communications gap where ·the three factions are divided on.many issues, we are Wlited, and no greater compliment can be given. We believe in Southeastern, we be­lieve Southeastern is ahead of its time in terms of communications and understanding. We have made great strides, and we will endeavor to continue in this direction in the future.

"The Student-Faculty Forum, which was established last year. is probably the most unique organ!­zation on campus, and is made ..p of seven students and seven faculty members, all of which are elected. Everyone has a hand in who serves on the Forum, as the student body elects the faculty members, and the faculty elects the student members. The sole purpose of this organization is to aid Southeastern in its entire scope of activities from academic to extra-curricular. This group meets twice each month and is open to any student or faculty member who wants to bring some­thing to their attention, or just to sit in on discussions."

Dean Sturch is currently ser­ving as Governor of the Texas­Okla. District of Kiwanis, which is second in size only to Califor­nia, Nevada and Hawaii. The man who "likes people, period" is Governor Sturch

-•

' October 22, 1970 .

SSC Social Fraternities Add 111 Pledges This Fall

One hUDdred and eleven men Curry, Jerry Daris, Jim Dt"ldds, are pledging Southeastem•s four Randy England. Rickey Goad, Dick social fraternities this semester, McCarley, Archy Packard, Sbnd according to Dr. Jobn Krattiger, Plerse and Larry Robert~. dean of men. Others are Shelby Skidmore,

Delta Chi Delta picked up 41 J obn Small, Steve Smith, Chris, pledges this fall. They include, Shannon, Spencer Seyb, Sam Trent. Rick Andrews, Stacy Blakemore, John Walker, James Waltoo and Ricky Bone, Flenola Bonner, John Randall YOtmg. Boyd, WUU.am Brodie, Charlie Twenty-ftve pledgeswerepicked Camp and Larry Coggins. up by Sigma Tau Gamma. They

Others are Mike Fennessey, include, Robert Armst.roog, Bobby Jeff Filice, Ralph Garcia, Odie Beavers, Frank Birdsong, George Hardin, Phillip Herzeoach, Steve Blakemore, Tim Brown, Joe Hiser, Tim Johnston and Johnny Burns, Jon Burns, Jobn Doo.neu, Knapp. ' Dick Dunham and Jesse Grfftlth.

Also. Rick Linnell, Ronnie Others include J.B. Gray, Lofton, Woody Lynch, Mark Michael Haggerty, Clifford Jor-Marlew, Randy Mullens, Lewis dan, RichardMUler, Dean Phillips, Nortoo, Grady Parker, Richard Joe Pruitt, Tommy Rice, Mike Payne, Troy Porter, Jan Randle, Spencer, Tommy Stockdale, and Danny Reasoner andMike Redbird. Dave Straway.

Other Delta Chi pledges are Also, John Waggoner, Larry Randy Riggs, David RoblDSOD, White, James Wllliams, Jerry Carroll Scott, Mlke Slone, Herb Yandell and Joe Y obe. Stebbins, Dale Stepp, KeUhStorey, Tau Kappa EPstloo fraternity Blll tsoodle, Terry Wallace, Don picked up 16 new members. They

· Williams aod Keony Young. Include George Bouldin, Rick Pbl Sigma Epslloo fraternity Boyle, Fred Combrlnk and Doug

picked ~ 29 ot tbe lll pledges. David. · Tbelr new pledges Include Tom Also, Marvin Friddle, Mike Abbott, Bruce Akard. Danny Baskin Hardy, Ronnie Hunter, · Kenny Bne BigbleL _ Doo Bivens, Joe Joynston, Chris Keys and Dan Bullard, Bob Bums and Steve McAlUster. Burrage. Others areTimmyMillt\r. Hfty

Also, Larry Carter, Jack Yundyjlike Pi~kert, Roo Sbarp Cochnauer, Glen Conrad, John and Charles Tyre.

Psychedelic Lights .Add To Electronics Courses

• !'encils and rulers are no

longer the only tools used in ed­ucation. Blinking Christmas tree lights are becoming standard fare in sse electronics courses.

in brightness with the music's

Sensing a need for incentives to sour beginning students Into further study, inst ructor Dr. Jim Harmon devised an unusual class project. Some 35 students, about half of those enrolled in Elec­tronics 183 , have taken on the project with enthusiasm.

After analyzing commercial psychedelic lighting units, the 28 year old Harmon, designed his own ci rcuits. The lighting units are shaped like a triangular column and are made of plastic and alum­inum. Multi -colored Christmas tree lights provide the illumina­tion. When linked to a hi-fi or radio, the lights blink and vary

volume. Dr. Harmon's brainchild ca11

be assembled for $12. In com-· ·paring it with a $50 commercial job, the Southeastern prof says his is better.

The old adage about building a better mousetrap and the world beating your door down, has pro­ven true in this case. ~lectron­ics students are con ·ting as many as six Wlits ea ~..n and out­side requests for the light show boxes are frequent. One local man stated, " I've just got to have two for my stereo."

Obligingly, busy Dr. Harmon helps as many people as he can complete their new-found toys. He expects to see between 80 and 100 taken home before the

dent oriented rather than subject oriented, and I just Uke people, period. I suppose I like re-liv­ing my own experiences, but I get a great amount of ,satisfaction in

Attributing much of South­eastern's success to student involvement, De:1,0 Sturch says that the adiD.inistration stays in close touch through the various organi­zations, including the Student ·

We Welcome Students Accounts!

.. seeing students grow and mature., Education occurs as ta result o~ what happens between ~tudents and' teachers, and here at Southeast-

' ern we feel we have an exception-ally happy, well-contepted group. This is most exciting~ satisfying to see. We•re not faced with the student unrest that hangs over many campuses be~~- we have faith in our students anli they have faith in us." J

"We operate "very informally •1 beginning wilh Dr. Hibbk and work­

ing down. We have an OPen door

The I

CORNER Phone 924-.5300 1437 N. 1st

DURANT,OKLAH? MA

. I

CHARS URGER . Je-Fourth

55 Cents

·Senate. "However, we have two quite unique and successful groups that are of tremendous help in keeping the s tudent body, faculty and the administration informed, al)d whom we can work with easily."

. '

r

IIOX 130 200 WEST MAIN STREET D U RANT. OI<LAMOMA PMO NE 1 40~ 1 92•22 11

• Sa01uel Insurance Agency

'

Special izing in Insurance for

College. People

Durant

• .... ••14•fty ·'"'-•btl ..

924-1964

G RAC E 1 200 WEDD I N G RIN G 75

C I R CLET 1 500 A LSO 1 15 0 TO lt7

Every Keepsake engagement diamond is flawless, so you can choose rour Keepsake ring with confidence.

Gem Credit

Jewelers

• '

P1 -

·--... ..... _ ---

PUPl ander, L< Monk, Ill.

Page 5: omecom1n ctivities - carmine.se.educarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern/Newspapers/1970... · i, 1970 u = s to go TO. of booted !:C 28 in the .ced a \r • own 1ut in-mwho

1970

Ill ildds, Diet

Stand

nore, bris, rent, land

. eked Tbey obby orge Joe

nell, !11th. lY, Jor -lips, rfilte and

lrry ry

nity bey Uclt oug

ike nny >an try .rp

• c's

:an n-lal ys

lng rld 70-lll­

as Jt­ow :al ve

011

an s. 30

• ,

' .

Pye Fhe .THE SOU'mEAS'l'ERN, Doran!!!!~t,~O~kl~ab~om~a~------------- October ZZ, 19'l0

., • •

-

WHO'LL GIVE ME is the questl<ll barked by the auctioneer as bidders gra.b at a chance for piece of a ooe-time memory, the Pink Palace. The

Fall Happenings

• AtSSC

--

·-.... -

PUPPY LOVECOMEStoallofusoncein a while. Here Jody Alex­ander, Loco senior, cuddles up to one of her favorite friends, Chaucer Monk, In. The furry friend seems to be enjoying his ride .

• .

• •

Palace ls presently being torn down to make room for ·a new parking lot. ~ -

ADDING FINAL TOUCHES to a new project is a gtOCCJ ~artists working on an Indian display. Art classes and othr areas~ act­ivity abound the en sse campus as s tudents s trive for better unde.r­standing of the world around them.

STUDYING GETS TilE BE·SI'of most of us although the material may be quite interesting. Oc­cassiooally it is even possble to fall asleep,

as does this co-ed. The only problem with sleeping on one's books is there is that mucb left to do tomorrow.

Page 6: omecom1n ctivities - carmine.se.educarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern/Newspapers/1970... · i, 1970 u = s to go TO. of booted !:C 28 in the .ced a \r • own 1ut in-mwho

, PageSix THE SOUTHEMTEM

I

. . .

• •

Science Students Gaining Useful Class Experience

• Some 55 Southeastern students

are gaining practical experience this semester in the teaching of science to elementary children b}' participating in an experimental group at Northwesst Heights ele­mentary school.

The college students are en­rolled in a science methods class for elementary teachers under the supervision of Lewis Barker, a member of the sse science de­partment. Barker uses a techni­que called Science: A Process Approach to the teaching of science for beginners. In this type of classroom situation, Barker ex­plained, the students are actively involved by doing science rather than reading about it.

It is interesting to note that the student teachers use no books ln the teaching situation and are not required to buy one for the college class they attend.

TKYI.NG N~W TECIINIQUES ln teaebingele1Tlent­ary science are some of Lewis Barker's stu­dent teachers at Northwest Heights Elementary.

One bf the students is shown using a process approach in science with kindergarden and first grade pupils.

The college science students teach four classes at Northwest H~ights. Beginning the science program in kindergarten, the stu­dents also work with the two first

• t

Chem1stty· Class Tests D ishwash ing Detergents

lf you are one of those students who can't see the relevance or application of y~ courses, you .should take Pbyst~ Cbemis ry 455. .

The ctass under the supervt ... sion of Arnold W~er is in the process ct testing several of the most popular Uqtid disbwasbing dettergillts. According to Walker this e:tperiment , ~etermlnes the surface c~clitioo for various de­tergent-water mixtures in order • to predict the detergent's effect-iveness as a cleansing agent. 1

In tesijng these deterge~ts the class is gett:Uig unpublish~ information about Uquid detergents to see how industr-Y does it. Tbls provides a ftrst-~d Jcnowledge of bow to perfor~ the requi.rtt experiDlents startug from notliing.

Finding bow etfective the t91> eight or nine detergents

cleansing agents is a discovery type experiment.

Joe Cross, a student help­ing with the experiment, is quite enthusiastic, "In the lower cour­ses , you don't do this. It is sOmething like working with a company. You could run into the same things with a company."

Other students are finding a lot of fun with the experiments and resulls will be posted in the trophy case on second floor of science building as ,soon as the study is completed.

Airman Vince E. Hiatt has com­pleted basic training at Lackland AFB, Tex. He has been assigned to Lowry AFS, Colo., for training in •the supply field. Airman Hiatt, 1966 graduat~- of Red Oak l:ligh School, received his B. A. degree in 1970 from Southeastern.

~ ..t/11

uP in the science labs all the time. The latest ooe to app'ear oo campus is soap-making. The project is shown 1n action hete as ooe of the participants carefully measure~ out the ingredients.

to · and

'

Listen all Sav,age games at home

radio 107

Plans Unveiled For I

Parking Development Parking lot development plans the faculty, staff and students must

were announced this week by Troy- abide by the motor vehicle regula­ce McGovern, chairman of the tions set forth on page 11 of the Parking and Traffic Committee. Southeastern State College Hand­The plans were presented after a book." study of parking problems on cam- As the cost is so great for con -pus. struction of parking facilities and

Plans includes completion of the 1'5 the parking facilities are so un­parking lot north of Montgomery derdeveloped atthis time, the COf!!­

Road ·and north of the twin towers mittee has decided not to plan or within_ the n~t few weeks' and. designate any zoned parking or in­or Russell building for faculty, dividual reserved parking. except staff an!J vis itors. for the few staff and students who

Other plans are to provide add- are handicapped. monal parking space in the area "The Parking and Traffic Com­o( the former "Pink Palace"and mittee is grateful to the staff and ~tween the tennis courts and the students for their patience and maintenance building just north understanding of the parking prob­of the heating plant. There are lems, and the committee is hope­plans also for expanding the park- ful that you will continue vour cooo­ing lot which is located west of Sev- e ration, " McGovern said. enth Avenue, extending it west to . He went on: "The commi.ttee accomodate approximately another ts always eager to have suggestions 100 cars. Some exploratory work for improving the parking facilities i s being con<;lucted to determine the or to he~r any particular problems possibility of getting the city of that an lndlvidual or . group may Durant to extend Eighth A venue have. Should anyone have any pro­north, opening up a new exit -entry blem or suggestions, th~y should r oute to this pa rking lot. be brought to the attention of the

McGovern stated the plans re- committee in writing, by phone, or present an estimated cost of$200, - a personal visit." 000. He went on to say that "the All official action taken by the cost of $1,000 per vehicle is re- committee will be rel~ased in quired to construct a parmanent writing to the person or persons concrete parking facility with pro­per drainage, curbs, etc."

Many traffic rules and regula­tions are being violated and cita­tions are still being issued by the campus traf,ic enforcement of­fleers, McGovern noted. "Those violations must be enforced, and

CHULZE Fabric Shop

for the unusual in dress and cu:;:tain

fabric.

2 0·~ W. Ever g r e e n

uvOn On~

I

Music Shop

CASH DISCOUNT 0~ STERO 1RECORL>i3 ' . A~D TAPES 109 . 3rd

Corner Drug Store GRADUATE

REGISTERED PHARMACISTS

145 W. Main

GUNTER DRUG Phnne 824-!415 Free Del.

Third lr Main Durant. Okl.a

Fo~ Wom~• J unrle Gardenia Cham~) No. 5 White StfoulderA Faht-rce Rt>vlon

For .tl~• Brute hy Faberge Nine Flag!\ British Sterling EnJCli~h Leather Chane I ,

grade classes. Regular teacher s are Mrs. Wayne Estus, Mrs. Troy Scoggins, and Mrs. LouisJohnson. They and Carl Mackey, princi­pal, help supervise the relatively 1 new innovation in teaching for Dur­ant schools.

The project started when Bar­ker began bringing three or four children at various time into the college classroom for his methods students to teach. The idea seemed . to take and he persuaded the local school system to try a class or two on the method.

It actually dates back to Sept­ember, 1959 when some thirty-five scientists, scholars, and educati rs gathered at Woods Hole on Cape Cod to discuss how education in science might be improved in pri­mary and secondary schools. That meeting was called by the Nat­ional Academy of Sciences to study the problem of improving the dis­semination of scientific knowledge. The intention was to examine the fundamental processes involved in imparting to young students a sense of the substance and method of science .

Since then, major efforts ~n curriculum design have been made by leading physicists, mathemati­cians, biologists, chemists, and educators. Many have been en­gaged in writing new instructional material.

The kindergarten and first graders are s~llfully led into di scovering sciencephe~mena fart themselves and the student teach-•

ers then rely on the experienced. teacher to make follow-ups by . reinforcing the material.

One of the big hOnuses for Barker's class is when the meth­ods students teach a special edu­cation class in the Durant s chrols. .

These children are composed of slow learners and the physic- · ally handicapped. When the teach- . ers appear for the lesson, the children applaud and at the con­clusion of the lesson, the children plead with them to stay longer and to "please come back."

Barker said, "Most beginning elementary teachers fear science teaching, but after trying this met­hod, they now tell me it's the sub­ject they look forward to, and this is quite a reversal.''

Swinney Drug

Store

144 West Main

College Books - - Supplies

Art Supplies

Sweat Shirts

THOMPSON BOOK

& SUPPLY CO.

Fifth Ave. and College Blvd.

Phone 924-1213

DURANT

Pr

. -.... '

PH1 Sou Cot

f .5

not • prot

Mur atiOI

• !

east ache

·and . ' ally

. A \ PJ a vi at twen· Robe lnois Geor City; rida· , New·

~ Thorn tucky

• Penru Dural Dural

B1 Gorsk nie li Husse and D1

• land. M

Florid City; Stepbe Kennel

• Rol CaUfo1 Bangk< Bunter

·James fornla; ue; Wa

• Durant Christi

The ~bull< sse n

'

We '

..

Page 7: omecom1n ctivities - carmine.se.educarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern/Newspapers/1970... · i, 1970 u = s to go TO. of booted !:C 28 in the .ced a \r • own 1ut in-mwho

~2, 1970

• tng e !achets 5. Troy >hnson. prlncl -ative ly >rDur-

n Bar-•r four tto the ethods eemed ~ local 1ss or

. Sept-y-flve cati rs Cape

ton in n pri -. That

Nat -study ! dis-edge. .e the ·ed in ;ense x1 of

ts in . n ade 1at1-

and en-

onal

first into

a faq ach­nced. ; by.

for eth-

, r

~du­

Y.>ls. • sed sic- · !Ch­the on­ren ger

ing 1ce 'e t­ub­his

• •

• ....

. PHYSICAL F ACIU'i'IES 'GROW year by year a t Southeastern as buildings rl.se oo the campus. Completion of the twin towers and construction

beginning oo new parking lots add to SSC's availability for student use, and the future holds much more. .

Fly, Forget Your Problems Says New Aviation Instructor

"When you are flying you do She first learned to fly in Ard- was the only woman that helped not have time to think about your more at the old Springer Air- to pilot tne s1x C47's in freight problems," says Mrs. E lizabeth field. Near the end of World deliveries. This company soon Murphy, Southeastern's new avi- War II, she joined the WASPS merged with ~ Air Express Co-ation instr uctor. Women's Auxiliary Service Pil- mpany based m St. Petersburg,

Mrs. Murphy joined the South- ots. but the program was dis- Fla. eastern staff this fall and she te- continued by a move of Congress. This is Mrs. Murphy's first aches p~imary ground instruction Mrs. Murphy went t~ Florida opportunity to teach aviation. She

·and advanced ground instruction. after the war and along with 14 feels there is no difference in " I've been interested in flying other pilots helped to form the teaching her students as compared

ally my life," says Mrs. Murphy. Florida Fresh Air Express. She to other instruc tors. She was one of 100 selec ted to attend an aero­space workshop in the summer of 1969. At this workshop she help­ed to write a curriculum guide for the state of Oklahoma.

-Aviation FraternityNames Pledges For Fai/Sernester She has had little time for fl y­

ing lately. because she i s work­i ng on her doctorate.

Alpha Eta Rho, international aviation fraterni ty, has picked up twenty-seven pledges. They are: Robert Arganbright, Wyoming, Ill­inois; Louis Burkholtz, Ft. Wor th; George Blakemore, Oklahoma City; Geor ge Bouldin, Miami , Flo­rida; and Richard Boyle, Syosset, New York.

Michael Braithwaite, Durant; Thomas Cas tlen, Owensboro, Ken­tucky; Thomas Dairs, Bethel Park,

· Pennsylvania; Joseph Dovenes, Durant; and Robert Dryden of Durant.

Bruce Erickson, Durant; Gail Gorski, Prospect, Kentucky; Ron­nie Hampton, Ft. Worth; Aziz Hussein, Tanzania, East Africa; and Donald KJegler, Bel Air, Mary­land.

Mark Mackay, Coral Gables, Florida; lrley Marchant, Midwest City; James McGuure, Durant;

· Stephen Miller, Arnett; and Kenneth Moore, Durant.

Rober t Nordberg, Long Beach, California ; Prathipasen Chookiat, Bangkok, Thailand; Jan Randle, Huntersville, North Carolina;

· James Sanders, Loog Beach, Cali­fornia; and Derick Seqursoo, Seat­tle; Wasbtngtoo; Randolph Speidel,

· Durant and Robert Wells, Corpus

Christi. Tbe pledges have the project

ol building a billboard advertising SSC, Durant and the Flying Sava­

is

MercllfJtle com,.ny

We Carry A Complete I Jne

MEN"S - WOMEN"S CLOTRINC

building a ~er for homecoming which is to be kep a surprise. The only clue is that this is the biggest one sse has ever seen.

In November, five members of the fraternity will be attending an airmeet in Alburn, Alabama. The faculty sponsor attending the meet will be Mr. David Rich, English instructor.

Southeastern's Rodeo Club held its second meeting of the year last week with 40 members pre­sent. Butch Rose, junior English ma­jor from Caney, was elected pres­ident of the c lub for the com~ng year.

Elected as vice president was Roger Barnes, a Soper senior. Holding the office of treasurer is Jean Franklin, Poteau senior.

Leatherstocking

Leather Specialities Vest,Pants,etc.

Made to order 3-5 Mon. Wed.Fri.

10-5 ""4'U 6;:~~:~:~:;:;:~:;.:.;:;:,;_:;;; ~~

Mrs. Murphy says her most exciting experience was when she went up to practice spins and a t about 3500 feet the window blew out and put a hole in the top of the wing. " l tried to see how gently I could land the plane." she said.

As the space program devel­ops. Mrs. Murphy feels that more women will enter this field, but finding qualified women will be another thing; there a re not many women· qualified, especially com ­pared to the number of the male sex. Women are gaining every day in the commercial flying field, though.

"Flying is the most refreshing and relaxing exper ience a person can have.,, says sse's new in-struc tor. _________ _

'S Jewelry - Gifts

• Fine : & latches

Ulique Gifts ani

Large awlle Selectim

an West lkin

BUDDY SPENCER MERCURY- FORD

Service Is Our Business

924-1887

~-----------------October 22, 1970

. Changing Times M8ture Our Southeastern Campus

Southeastern Is now in its assumed the post, followed by i.T. · sixty-first year and the campus Montgomery in 1939. has seen various changes. With Next to take the position was Homecoming activities coming up Dr. Allen E. Shearer, followed -by it is per haps appropriate to look Dr. Hibbs. . back into our history, find out what First graduating class ofSouth-Sootheastern was - and is. eastern was that of 1910, composed

The college, as most know, was of five women granted life· cert­founded in 1909, and from the date ificates to teach in Oklahoma Pub­of its founding until 1921 was call - lie Schools. ed the Southeastern State Normal Although most students take for School. It then offered only a granted the now annual pr oduction curriculum leading to a life teac- of Ttte Savage yearbook , such was her's ce r tificate, with courses de- not always so. The first yearbook signed for either high school or appea red at Soutbeaste£n in 1910 college c redit _and including but bearing the name of The Hollsso . two year s of college work. The Holisso appeared every year

A change of name and face for a while, then came a period came in '21 when the college was when no yearbook at all was pub­formally named Sopth~ternState lished. Teachers College. With the name In the 1920's the book's name change came the offering of two was changed to The Southeastern, more years of college work and but again production stopped after the authorization to offer bachelor a short time. The yearbook ap­of arts and bachelor of science peared once again, in 1946, this degrees in education. time as The Savage.

Nearly all buildings on campus The campus newspapE¥" first were built in the 1920's. The appeared in 1913 as The Gazette. Indust r ial Arts building was com- This first paper surviv~ only a pleted in 1947, with the dor m· short while, but ooce reappeared itorities being added in the 1950' s. in 1922 this time as the Na- Na-

A history of Southeastern No-Wa. Fi r st issue of the present shows that it has been served by campus newspaper The Soutb-14 presidents including the present aastern also appeared in 1922 .

. administ rator, Dr. Leon Hibbs. Many changes have occurred M. E. Moore began as the first since that tim:iin the physical

presrdent, then Dr. E. D. Murdaugh appearance cf e college, the took ove r in 1911. Murdaugh was courses and degr s offered, in­succeed by Professor W. C. Cant- .._structors and ideas. erbury. r \\'hat are some of the sig -

Andrew Faulkner was the act- nificant changes? Recent ones ing president during the school noticeable a re the Southeastern year 1915-16. Dr. T.D. Br ooks fountain remodelinb of the dining succeeded next to the presidencv. areas and the finished construction

Sixth president of sse was Dr. of the new twin tower co-education­Henry Bennett. The seventh pres- a! dormitories. ident, Dr. Eugene Briggs , served How have these changes affect­until 1933 when replaced by Wade ed the campus? One long time pro­Shumate. fessor fee ls that "Southeastern

Southeastern has been se rved has undergone change for the •

by one woman president , Mrs. better. It has grov.n and mature4 Kate Galt Zaneis. She was sue- right along with the changing ceeded by an acting president. Dr. times."

.

William Morrison. during the sum-mer of 1937. _

Professor H. Vance Posey then

'S •

ftllsbims ---.:.r of CAI..JiitJraA Cbntry Set HIDes & &e.lcy Mist

Alnty lb;e Roast Beef 8t Ham Sandwiches

2222 West Main Phone 9%4-5516

, ... .. .. .. .. .. . . .. .. .. . . . . .. 0 .. 0. .. -DURANT DRUG . ... .. . . . . .. .. .. :. :0 .. • ••• .. .. . ,, •• • • .. .. .. .. ••• 0 .... .. ·:·: .. .. .. .. .. .. • 0 •• . . ·. •••• ..... .. • • • • .. .. .. .. ·:~ .. · . •• •• •• :::: .. .. .. ••• • .. .. .. .. •••• .. "' .. .. . . .. • ••• .. ·.· .. ·' ' •••• .. .. ••• • .. ..... .... ... ,.: , .. ~. ~=·· ~::: ~0!. .. , :::: .. .. ••••

119 N. 3rd Durant, Okla. •

Cosmetic Headquarters for: HER

Dana Nina Ricci Revelon

Coty DuBarry Max Factor

Faber ge

Tus sy

Tweed

mM Canoe Brut Pub

' English Leather Faberge W"est Jade East Lentherie Timber line

Curr1er & Ives Shulton

~\\ L'OREAL Lenel :;:: Br itish Sterling ~~~ S&H Green Stamps free Delivery .. .. . .. . ~· ~· ............ -. _,_, ........ . ,, ... '\..'-.'-.\. ...... ,,. '..' sc;:::~:::::::;::::::~::::::;:::::::;~::.;~::::~:!:!::::;::::::::::::;::..-:.'-:::::::~x~::~:=:~:!~:::~:::.,~::::_,~~:s~~"''QI.;''•:-..

Page 8: omecom1n ctivities - carmine.se.educarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern/Newspapers/1970... · i, 1970 u = s to go TO. of booted !:C 28 in the .ced a \r • own 1ut in-mwho

Page Etcbt THE SOVTHEASTEJ, Durant .. ~lahhma Ostnbftr 2Z 1979

a tten I

arne I

So tetn Sta~ tangle I_ SOC Head Coach, Bob.Tbomas work t~ther as a team. with the Nor1Jlwestem rs at 2 1 wltl be playiog PWltar Tom Strode the line getting their blocks and p.m. Sat(urday. Homecoming is who is fourth in the nation in the backfield hitting the holes we the feature of the day.

1 panti.ng, Clarence Hudon, Carl Fin- will be able to beat anyooe."

FaclDg another tOOgb cooter- nie, and llarvey Balttwin for bls Bubba Hart, Savage defensive ·ence batY:e, the Savages will want I dreams o~ vtctory to come true. guard added, "The team bas to put au they've ~ lnto tbe Savage grldmen, Arthur Ramoz been getttng filred up, ana lS

victory tp hooor th•r new foot- 1 stated, "Injuries have hampered looking fotward to a victory, es-ball ~ I us 1 most of the seasoo, but now peclally from Northwestern.,

Last year Northwestern de- we· bave got some oew offensive With the fact that this will feated th~ Savages 19-8 I starters who received practice be ·homecoming witb more people

HarYef Baldwin, varsity quar- J in the L~stoo game and will on hand to boost spirit, and the tert».ck sta~· "Evenl thougb we be ready for Northwestern. players are ready for victory, have badj a pretty 'j!.,::SClll, Another ,Savage gridman, Carl the Savages may taste victory wttb tbe !student body us, Holtman cqmmented "If we wU1 Saturday. "

ft ought Ito do well aptnst Nor- tiO(oQ •••••.••••••• •••·•·•·•·• •·•·•·• ······································.-···············~·~·~·:..·~·-·.·.·.·.·.~ ...... ·.··········• tl:lweste~" ~ ., .................. , •••••••••• ·.·············;,tt ........................... ·.····•• ·•·•·•·•·•·•·•· · · ·• · · · · · · · .-..... • · · · •· · ~ Baldwin, a freshman from ·::: 1 ·:·:

::: ~~~· J:fek!'":'""~ ~ ports _ arts i esperience starting fon

1 s Soutbeas- ~ \

tern. BY RON SHARP ~ . Baldwin isn't the ooly freshman Homecoming for sse, ~It

who bas been starting. Both ott- is for any college, is filled with enslvely &Jld defensively, sse bas scbool spirit and surprises. The been try1Qg out new ntaterial to

1 S&ftges will be facing a team

find a winding comblnattpo. wttb about the same type of pro-The Savages must stop North- blems as they have encountered,

1 western rtshers Max !Qssell and so the outcome of the game will i Jobn Wlll who. the ~ers have really be interesting. lfSoutbeas­. · relied on in their previous games tern can be l>OOsted by the extra 1 for yardage. I splrlt, Northwestern may be in

Ranger coach, J. W.COI-e, comes for trouble. to SSC after a defeat bj Panhan- Tommy Strode , SSC senior dle last V(eek. Not:th~stern is gridman, Is fourth in the nation in now 3-2 for the season and 1-2 pWlting. This achievement was in the collegiate ronference. .announced by Coach Bob Thomas at

The Savages will be trying to a spirit rally~ get their first win for the season I Team rosters for the women's after losing 25-0 last 1 week to intramural vdlleyblll pr~ram are Langston. to be given to ~ rs. Hudson today.-

1 •

· Langst n · Drushes . \ .

~ outJh astern i2 5-0 LANGSI'ON- The L4ngston

Lions and some 3,000 01~ Grads whooped it up Saturday night, and with good reason : they snapped a 17-game losing streak to the tune of ~ at the 8fpense of helpless Southeastern.!

sse is now· o-s for the season and has won but one gamd in the last 15 outings. 1 . __

The Savages had an especially dark first half, picking 1 up a grand total of 30 yal'$ of­fensively-20 on the ground and 10 in the air. And that's the way it went, behind 191-0 with tuill the ballgame left to play. I

The Savages bad a brilliant - chance early in the match ~hen

Gerald O'Dell pounced on a loole ball on the second pUly of tbe game, just 38 yards ·!from paydirt. They never got closer before int~~ission.

A clip -~n sSe's first play shoved ~ball back 15 yaqts, a running play cost another 1ard, a blitz nailed quarterback Harvey Baldwin on the 44 in Southeastern's end on the field. It just woqldn't go. 1

Langstori came off a 41-0i loss to Panhanclle last week, bu ·you couldn't tell it an Anderson eld Saturday.

Randy Welborn . That boosted I •

the count to 13-() when the kick sailed off to the left.

Another eXplosion added six more points to the scoreboard With 20 seconds on the block. ~angston quarterback Odie Waller heaved the ball to fullback Freddy Guy, looping out of the backfield, on a play that covered 48 yards. \ Langston got on the

scoreboard initially the easy ..;,_y, when defender Charles Brown fell on a Southeastern

· ftimble in th4i end zone. \'lbe final ~ Lion tally came _ · dway in tb+ third quarter. and

it. as another f\Uilble that did it. ngston's Andrew Johnson

~abbed the ball on the 25 and ~red 75 yards to the goal line.

Statistically, it was a closer ifime. with both teams picking up 11 dirst downs. Langston "unted only 161 yards in total oJiense, 96 of them coming on seveo passes in 16 tries. sse ~~erback Baldwin, suffering ftom a lealcy offensive line, ~ged only 2 of 7 for 21 yares. ·~-wo of his , efforts were in­tercepted. sse gave away the taall three times on fumbles Uangston on~. I The Lions had more trouble

with referees than with~ Southesatern. They were whistled down 13 times for 145

' yards, compared with three ~

On the bulletin ball'~ ln the field­bouse one can find these words-­Winning isn't everything, but it sure beats coming in second.

Basketball practice bas begWl for Southeastern in preparation for their first game December 4. Practice began O~tober 15.

I f the gymnasium were opened students could use the weight mach­ine, play basketball, indoor foot ­ball, swim, play tennis, or anything that is more constructive than des­tructive. Adding to the problem is the fact that not even the game room is open on Sundays.

lf it weren't for the football games, and those that live too far away to go home every weekend, this campus would be like a desert­ed paradise .

Student boredom is a serious problem at Southeastern and one that must be remedied, unless this college wants to continue to keep the nickname of the suitcase college.

You

Jr. 'Varsity Smashes Austin College JV's 30-8

By HAROLD HARMON

The Southeastern Savages let it all hang out MoodaJ afternoon as the junior varsity took a 30-8 victory over the Austin College JV's at Sherman.

Savage coaches Clyde Smith and Red Rutherford had nothing but praise for the sse efforts as the future varsity romped the Te1ans with quarterback Dave Tid­well nrtng a pair of scorlng strikes and scoring ooce oo a long range run.

Lavon Hicks rung the bell with a 27 yard pass from Twid­well, coming off a broken pattern when the rush forced the Savage thrower out of the pocket.. Hicks

Quarterback Twtdwell handled tb8 next scoring bmors, pllop­lng some S3 yards to pay dirt: to wrap up Savage scoring ex­cept for pdnts after. The little Savages went for two each time, converting three for four.

Dewayne Cole, q)erattng as a split end, hauled in a two-point cmversion pass after putting a good move on a Kangy defeDder. Twldwell swept the right side ~ the pass option for another duece and Crain stormed througb oo a down-and -across pattern and glommed onto the third succ­essful bonus effort. A qulck pit­ch wide to Hicks was baited short of the line to prevent a four­for-four eUort.

snared the aerial and showed Coach Smith's offensive lines his heels to the baby kangaroos did just about as they pleased, something Hicks does extremely rolling to 187 yards nisblng and well, being a track man as well adding 136 through the air on a as a fine footballer. Lavon is 7 of l5 daY for Twidwell, inclu-lneligible for varsity ball, tran- dlng two scoring shots. t: sferring here and needi_!lg more The leading Savage rusher hours to be able to play. He was Gary Vest witb 6 tries ror will be ready to go next year. 65 yards. Top pass grabber was

Tight end Earnest Crain boom- Earnest Crain who had 3 catches ed in from 23 yards out oo a for 72 yards one touchdown on pass from Twidwell as the Sta,. that great ~ and a two-point hit his second scoring toss of the conversion pass reception. game. Crain, who looms to be a great receiver and runner, broke tackles, was knocked off balance. regained it by using his hand

to run "three-legged" for a few yards, and pushed his way onto the s coreboard.

Gary Vest, got loose for the ... yards, and pushed his way onto from 44 steps out on a twisting scamper through a broken field. Using his blQCkers well, Vest managed almost half the field in one .sweep.

'

• 1n

u bilation Hou

Fun Gifts

for All Ages

316 W. Main

' on

Two of the Lions' first hiJf "TDs came on· cross try plays. One came with 4:16 left before intermission when ed Alexander broke over the 1Pt side end galloped 51 yards f,.- a score. out distancing deferider

infractions, each a major penalty. •

Most people say you have to start at the bottom no mat­ter how high you want to climb.

Is that really so? '

UNITED STATES AIR FORCE Box A. Dept SCP-79

---·

EDYlltrl'

ii5 W. Main

Maybe it's a story they tell just to get people to start at the bottom.

The United States Air Force lets you start climbing as soon as you get out of Officer Training School. If you have a college degree you become highly responsible, fasc, as an Air Force pilot.

You become a space-age leader on the Aerospace Team,

Lots of people start at the bottom. We're asking you to start on executive row.

Randolph Atr Force Base. Texas 781 48 Please send me more mformat1on

Name

College

Graduat iOn Dnte

Address

Age

Phone

l Coly _ State Z1p __

I I understand there •s no obl•gat ion.

I STATESAIR ------ ----- - - ----------

• •

-

..

...

. s t ( 1

d• t~

St

Cl S1 ir

-

s L . A . R

u L 0 tl fl

Y' m F e1 IT 0

fa ye

s s l d c

s n d n d 0 t!