reception invitation is to students - carmine.se.educarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/the...

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WI · - - v ...... ter••ational Students Plan Biz 0 r The 118'1 Auutl IDter- in the S08U B•Uroon•. The neat wOl be opa to the pubtic fnwn 9 Lm. - 4 p.m. eaeh day. 011 the eveaing of the 19, fnw11 6 to 9:30 p.m., a food tl'· tillg, fashion aod eultural sbow will be held, •• iD the bsDNOIII. There will be a fee af $2 for tdulta, 11 ·for .tlld•ata for thi• ••· sioa oa:b'- Tbe pWpDII of the bi- zerre ia to aive the iDter- Ditioatlltudeota Oil ... m. pus au to UU"e their Dltioatl eul- ture1 with others. "Tbe1e ltudeata iDvolved will pt toptber aod let up booths displayiag eul- tu'ral it8JDa fnwn their OWD eouatries, pictures of their lifestyles, typee of clothing, kiDda of foods, aod just ao,U.iog flu11 their backl(ftHIDda," e,.- Reception Invitation Is All Southel!ltera stu- dents have beea iovitecl to a reeeption to be held iD the bODor of Dr. '•ny William• follow iag his iD- auguratioD as the 16th President of th4N univer- sity. The eveat is ecbed- uled for November 16. The reeeption will be held iD the dining ball aoa is set to begin at approx- imetely 4:30 p.m. "We of the ID•,.wal Committee waot atudanta to kmw that we eDCC"•r- age their atteDd•MI at the reeeptioD," aaid co+n .. tittee cb•h "'ID Dr. Paula Platter. "'Tbia ia the _ firat m••cu- ratioo ever at thit iDititu- tioa, ADd iD that telp8Ct it is a bWorical aen"-. Dr. WOHI!M hal aften ltated that 117'fiag ltu- denta ia the main ob- joc:tive af CM" Ullivenity, &Dd fm lUte be WCMaJd be very ple111ed thet u m10y studeata .. polsible share this day with him," abe said. "We have a stroDg tredi- tioD here, aod I believe maDy of our present ltu- deDta williDCOUI'&ge their ebiJdren to attead South- etltea n. It would be Diee for them to be tble to teD their · ebildren that they were prtnnt at thi1 4' c:ial oce•eice," abe added. 8tudelltl wOl •• be •"-ded the oppcid1111ft1 to 11 eet piuan• who hold hiP nnlrt ill the OklaN.u• hiaher eduea-· tion 1J11tem u weD u illOueatial · pvenmeat dipitt 1 WI. Ma. linda Ble=keauip .. . To Students who preuatly aerves as Preaiclellt of the Board of of Ok'•homa Col- leges will be pre11ent as will Ms. Avaloo Beeee, PresideDt of the Okla- homa State Regeota for Higher Edueatioo. Dr'. De• Hobb1, IDt.im Chancellor, Oklahoma State Regeota of Higber Edueatioa, will ,1., be pre111nt to gaeet thn11e atteDdiog the re ceptjooa. GoverameDtal official• p.re11nt w01 be the HODOr- able Wea Watkias af the U.S. Boule of Repre aentativea, aod the Hoo- uratle Gu7 Da.ta fawn the Oklabcaa HOUM of Bep- reMatativet. WatkiDa •••••• the Tbird. w iD the Ccwc• e. &Dd Dalil is the MY. ity Floor McLain Soutbe'lil6rll OklaM+u1 State Ulliveriit1 Tbntre reeeut.1J «''Tittd iD the Anwaieta Calle11 Thestre Feetiftl Cc-a4'atition held iD Cblektabl' Their ...... duetioll af .. R•"'" received Awardl of ExcelleDCe for aetiot. directing, tedtni- eal directloe, ADCiprap ..... . The Awn af ExcelhDCe which wet to prop dMip was eapeeilll7 aaatif)ina to prap ..... _Den Kc- l•io, a nuior from Odt11 sa, Tall bec•a-e it was the first ti11 e Soutbelst- 61D bas ever received ooe. .. A. .. maeb u it is a bowt for· DIJII)f, it is 1110 a booA for Soutbentau," 11aut Md•iD who hal been .. .. ... . . •. .. 0 I I Leader iD the Oklahoma Houme of Representatives. "The11e five people, along with Dr. Williams, have a strong impe ct on the edu- eatioD•J system of Okla- homa, aod it is very rarely poaible for studeDta to meet aod vi•it them. This is reaiJy a good oppor- tunity for our studeDts," Dr. Platter COIDIDIDted. Alao, during the reeep- tioD, the mace aod 1141da1- lion wiD be Oil display. The11e two items have been a eated for the uDi- veraity, aod leter will be on permaoent di.lplay after a suitable loeatioa is c:hoeen. Cake aod paocb will be aened at the CCJi'WI aM 10 receptioa. ms Awa•·d the prop ml'ter for the last four years. UntO DOW there was DO distino:tioa between props aod aet design. The most iDtri.:1te of the props was · a gramopbODe that took Mel•in "'"lft thao two days to eoa.etruet but was only oo All'! for a matter pboae was u iDte&ral part of the aet became itll mu8e is belrd tbroqbout the play. The sosu Theatre Com- pany will 111m in Deeem- ber if they have been selected to go to the ACTF Rcc•at Festival held iD Feba caery at Teua Tech Ulliverlity iD Lub- bofo.k, Tez11 . - pl•iMd Twti Arlutroag, Dite ctor of the Interua- ere omorrow There will be at hnst booths repreleat- lior the eouotrie1 of Mex- ico, ThaO•nd, BengJ•dnh, ChiDa, Ptki••o, the Arab World, Aflic'D Coootr iea, aod the student 11en•te will have a booth for the USA. '"There will be musie. slides ahowo, jewelry aod tapestlies shown, along with muy other items," said Armat.roug. '"'lbe students do an of the deoxating, designing of booths, aod cooking for the food tastiog. '"Thia is ruDy going to be interes• ing aod I just real- ly wish that everyone would take a few minutes aod nm tbroaP the bi - zerre aod pt to know tbeee ltllllmt• a little better •" CQihh IDted Mrs. - Robert Dalva, dire;,&« of 7Tae Bilek Stalfola Re- will lr t.P£JJ, 411- r nuAy, Novftllber "6 iD the FiDe Arts Little Tbeater &om 10:30 to 11:00 Lm. Paul Mauur, DeaD of the Sehool of Arts aod Letters .at , will opeD the program. This pro- gram is opeD to the geDer- 1al studeDt body. Robert Dalva has aehe- duled a I&COild eppearaoee at 2 p.m. iD the UDiuiS i ty Center. NOiD 215 for an theatre aod mulie majors aod aoy other ioterested students. Mr. Dalva, loag-time ILMO'"iate aod frie.od of Fraocia Ford Coppola, is as a director, pro- ducer, aod slitor iD sueh rworks as A•IJjcn Grtaf- fiti. s• w--. n. God- fatlln. aod 71e Co11ventJ · ·tiott. Robmt Dalva was aJ110 nominated iD 1981 for - Robert Dalva has a'1o ' woa awards iD the Se= Film Festinl. e Houston Art Ditec- rtors Show, The Atlanta Film Festival. and is a three tim-a finalist iD the CLIO awards . Mr. Dalva is eurreDtly developing M-, BiotA••'• Keepef' , aD origiDal screenplay written by Bil- li e Letts aod DenDia Letts, teachers iD the Eogtisb department here *1 Southeastern. Robert Dalva has done Wldergraduate study ill both Harvard UDiversity -.ad Syracuse U niversity d rewived his B.A. iD at Colgate U Di- , versity iD 19M. BCii 11 :April 14, 1942 iD New York C"rty, Dalva is mv- • ied aod ha• three ehfl- dreo . - - Pnp .......... ................... P•W. ...... -. A__. .. ...__ .......... p ........... ..... ........ w .... '

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Page 1: Reception Invitation Is To Students - carmine.se.educarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern/Newspapers/1987...-WI· -v ..... ter••ational Students Plan Biz 0 r The 118'1

WI ·

-

-

v ......

ter••ational Students Plan Biz 0 r The 118'1 Auutl IDter-

in the S08U B•Uroon•. The neat wOl be opa to

the pubtic fnwn 9 Lm. - 4 p.m. eaeh day. 011 the eveaing of the 19, fnw11 6 to 9:30 p.m., a food tl'· tillg, fashion aod eultural

sbow will be held, •• iD the bsDNOIII. There will be a fee af $2 for tdulta, 11 ·for .tlld•ata for thi• ••· sioa oa:b'-Tbe pWpDII of the bi­

zerre ia to aive the iDter­Ditioatlltudeota Oil ... m.

pus au to UU"e their Dltioatl eul-

ture1 with others. "Tbe1e ltudeata iDvolved

will pt toptber aod let up booths displayiag eul-

tu'ral it8JDa fnwn their OWD

eouatries, pictures of their lifestyles, typee of clothing, kiDda of foods, aod just ao,U.iog flu11 their backl(ftHIDda," e,.-

Reception Invitation Is

All Southel!ltera stu­dents have beea iovitecl to a reeeption to be held iD the bODor of Dr. '•ny William• follow iag his iD­auguratioD as the 16th President of th4N univer­sity. The eveat is ecbed­uled for November 16. The reeeption will be

held iD the dining ball aoa is set to begin at approx­imetely 4:30 p.m. "We of the ID•,.wal

Committee waot atudanta to kmw that we eDCC"•r­age their atteDd•MI at the reeeptioD," aaid co+n .. tittee cb•h "'ID Dr. Paula Platter. "'Tbia ia the _firat m••cu­

ratioo ever at thit iDititu­tioa, ADd iD that telp8Ct it is a bWorical aen"-. Dr. WOHI!M hal aften ltated that 117'fiag ltu­denta ia the main ob-joc:tive af CM" Ullivenity, &Dd fm lUte be WCMaJd be very ple111ed thet u m10y studeata .. polsible share this day with him," abe said. "We have a stroDg tredi­

tioD here, aod I believe maDy of our present ltu­deDta williDCOUI'&ge their ebiJdren to attead South­etltea n. It would be Diee for them to be tble to teD their · ebildren that they were prtnnt at thi1 4' c:ial oce•eice," abe added. 8tudelltl wOl •• be

•"-ded the oppcid1111ft1 to 11 eet ··~ piuan• who hold hiP nnlrt ill the OklaN.u• hiaher eduea-· tion 1J11tem u weD u illOueatial ·pvenmeat dipitt1 WI. Ma. linda Ble=keauip

.. .

To Students who preuatly aerves as Preaiclellt of the Board of ~geata of Ok'•homa Col­leges will be pre11ent as will Ms. Avaloo Beeee, PresideDt of the Okla­homa State Regeota for Higher Edueatioo.

Dr'. De• Hobb1, IDt.im Chancellor, Oklahoma State Regeota of Higber Edueatioa, will ,1., be pre111nt to gaeet thn11e atteDdiog the re ceptjooa. GoverameDtal official•

p.re11nt w01 be the HODOr­able Wea Watkias af the U.S. Boule of Repre aentativea, aod the Hoo­uratle Gu7 Da.ta fawn the Oklabcaa HOUM of Bep­reMatativet. WatkiDa •••••• the Tbird. w iD the Ccwc• e. &Dd Dalil is the MY. ity Floor

McLain Soutbe'lil6rll OklaM+u1

State Ulliveriit1 Tbntre reeeut.1J «''Tittd iD the Anwaieta Calle11 Thestre Feetiftl Cc-a4'atition held iD Cblektabl' Their ...... duetioll af .. R•"'" received Awardl of ExcelleDCe for aetiot. directing, tedtni­eal directloe, ADCiprap ..... . The Awn af ExcelhDCe

which wet to prop dMip was eapeeilll7 aaatif)ina to prap ....._Den Kc­l•io, a nuior from Odt11 sa, Tall bec•a-e it was the first ti11 e Soutbelst-61D bas ever received ooe. .. A. .. maeb u it is a bowt for · DIJII)f, it is 1110 a booA for Soutbentau," 11aut Md•iD who hal been .. .. . . . • . . •. . . • • • 0 I I

Leader iD the Oklahoma Houme of Representatives. "The11e five people, along

with Dr. Williams, have a strong impe ct on the edu­eatioD•J system of Okla­homa, aod it is very rarely poaible for studeDta to meet aod vi•it them. This is reaiJy a good oppor­tunity for our studeDts," Dr. Platter COIDIDIDted.

Alao, during the reeep­tioD, the mace aod 1141da1-lion wiD be Oil display. The11e two items have been a eated for the uDi­veraity, aod leter will be on permaoent di.lplay after a suitable loeatioa is c:hoeen.

Cake aod paocb will be aened at the CCJi'WI aM 10 receptioa.

ms Awa•·d the prop ml'ter for the last four years. UntO DOW there was DO

distino:tioa between props aod aet design. The most iDtri.:1te of the props was

· a gramopbODe that took Mel•in "'"lft thao two days to eoa.etruet but was only oo All'! for a matter

pboae was u iDte&ral part of the aet became itll mu8e is belrd tbroqbout the play. The sosu Theatre Com­

pany will 111m in Deeem­ber if they have been selected to go to the ACTF Rcc•at Festival held iD Feba caery at Teua Tech Ulliverlity iD Lub­bofo.k, Tez11 .

-

• pl•iMd Twti Arlutroag, Dite ctor of the Interua- ere omorrow There will be at hnst

~levea booths repreleat­lior the eouotrie1 of Mex­ico, ThaO•nd, BengJ•dnh, ChiDa, Ptki••o, the Arab World, Aflic'D Coootr iea, aod the student 11en•te will have a booth for the USA. •

'"There will be musie. slides ahowo, jewelry aod tapestlies shown, along with muy other items," said Armat.roug. '"'lbe students do an of the deoxating, designing of booths, aod cooking for the food tastiog.

'"Thia is ruDy going to be interes• ing aod I just real­ly wish that everyone would take a few minutes aod nm tbroaP the bi­zerre aod pt to know tbeee ltllllmt• a little better •" CQihh IDted Mrs.

-•

Robert Dalva, dire;,&« of 7Tae Bilek Stalfola Re-

will lr D-.:~-t.P£JJ, 411- r nuAy, Novftllber "6 iD the FiDe Arts Little Tbeater &om 10:30 to 11:00 Lm. Paul Mauur, DeaD of the Sehool of Arts aod Letters .at , will opeD the program. This pro­gram is opeD to the geDer-1al studeDt body.

Robert Dalva has aehe­duled a I&COild eppearaoee at 2 p.m. iD the UDiuiSity Center. NOiD 215 for an theatre aod mulie majors aod aoy other ioterested students. Mr. Dalva, loag-time

ILMO'"iate aod frie.od of Fraocia Ford Coppola, is n~ as a director, pro­ducer, aod slitor iD sueh rworks as A•IJjcn Grtaf­fiti. s• w--. n. God­fatlln. aod 71e Co11ventJ · ·tiott. Robmt Dalva was aJ110 nominated iD 1981 for

-

Robert Dalva has a'1o ' woa awards iD the Se=

Film Festinl. e Houston Art Ditec­

rtors Show, The Atlanta Film Festival. and is a three tim-a finalist iD the CLIO awards. Mr. Dalva is eurreDtly

developing M-, BiotA••'• Keepef', aD origiDal screenplay written by Bil­lie Letts aod DenDia Letts, teachers iD the Eogtisb department here *1 Southeastern.

Robert Dalva has done Wldergraduate study ill both Harvard UDiversity -.ad Syracuse University

d rewived his B.A. iD at Colgate UDi­

,versity iD 19M. BCii 11

:April 14, 1942 iD New York C"rty, Dalva is mv­• ied aod ha• three ehfl­dreo.

-

-Pnp .......... ................... P•W. ...... -. A__. .. ...__ • .._~ ~ .......... p ........... ~........... ..... ........ w ....

'

Page 2: Reception Invitation Is To Students - carmine.se.educarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern/Newspapers/1987...-WI· -v ..... ter••ational Students Plan Biz 0 r The 118'1

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rial It is a ehallenp fur m•ny students to «:611£ up with

enough money to attend eollep without having to pureb88• an e:penaive food plan, therefore, I do not think it should be m•ncl1tor;y for students who Jive on campus to have to buy food points. By eboosing to attend c:ollete.-students have to beecwcc:e

somewhat mature adults and tlke OD a lot of ib:I:C-. I ... •. ..t-· d . . I respoDIII auwca •ncrwJ•ng '"''"I WJCir oWD 4 c•"'CM'•. - t

should be up to the Student whether or not he or abe wished to obtlin a food plan. 'llteylbouldn't be foreod to purehne oqe since ID08t of them have lone peraed the "eat your pen before leaving the table" st•p • . When a studeDt sips a bouliDg eootnet, he must allo

pay for his food plan IS well. A lot of students e~n't afford to pay the eel im1tod $600 for the plan much leas the oost of a larpr one if the un1ll one isn't suf&eiellt. Another disadvantqe ia m1ny students prefer DOt to

eat breakfut, therefore at the end of the semester they have several points. acunetimes even one or two books, left over. Points purchased in the spring m1y be c:uried over to the fall semester, but neit~r fall or spring points csn be carried over to the summer semester. This eavses students to waste and lose money or have to use them off campus for hllf their value. The cafeteria and eoffee shop are there to benefit

students, but when you think about it thi• 511teill the Auxilary Service has set up ia 1etn1lly hurting the student's pocket book in the long run. , Students on eampua abould be allowed to dec:ide for

themselves if they want to pureh1n a food plan. Also, the number of bootleta the7 wiab to buy shonld be up to them. One IOI~ioll •&J be to let students know they are availeble and let tbem decide when, if, and bow m1ny they would like to paaehne. I am reilly upaet with the reaJUIItions the Aum11"y

Service ia dem•ncling. U UU. is a e~mpua for students, then the food plana lhould be a benefit for tbo1e who wish to buy them, DOt a rnon.ey raiser to inaene the funds for the Auxilary SerVICe.

. · By Sltella BeDeway .-

'mE SOUTHEAS 1'8E SO , student D8w.paper of .

Southeastern Olrhhoma State UnhenitJ, ia · every Thursday ucept dw i•g botida71 and • •'

Subs c a iption nte ia $10 pH 'TfiV with the aew "181;. beginning OD September 1.

Opinion• 81pi6111d ill 1111: are r not neceaurily those of the atudeDt body. tbe l8caltJ, and the adminietr•IHa. Tbe Gpinkln• appeu••r ill byTifned ul 'del, • '"'· or ~ to the edlior are thaee of the hwlivthal waiter.

STAFF FtcHtcr •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Sheila BCIIJrlw &1' Itt: pea: ter'l ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• & :k: .... , .•.................••••....•..•.......•••••...•. ~~ ·················••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••E'k·---- . .•••••...••.•.•.•...••••••••••••••.••••••••••••.• ll•"tt;r NawiM&i) ....•..........••......•.•..•.............•......•.••.• ~ ~cltr AdYati•nclln•pr .................... C.Wa -Advis ............................... ~ ••••• ~ •••••• Rt-1) ~

Stno Te'l'lleJiWtm The d1ncea on c1mpua

are supposed to be a pl1ee to aoci•li2 with other students and a place to have fun. I.•st Thunday nirbt the

M•n1p11 ent and Market­iQg Club hoeted a B1Uo.. ween dance with a liO dollar priJie for beat cas

Some of the eonteat1nts had very eute eostn11 ea, but the winner of the eonteat wu, in my opi- , nion, not the beat eoa- I tume. The judpa were the 16St of the d1ncera and the7, as well as the win­ner, h1d VW) poor t1ste • The winner's CICIItume

WIS a priest eostuaM. It looked inNeeDt enough until they st•rted Judaing. When the Ja.tainr st•rtid the 1111 started 4Wag very vulgar and a ude thinp. The eoltoiiN WU VW)

andifmndit very di .... u., and dis- . t1ateful. Evm)one else i m1y ha .. fcM1ncl it to be ' eute, but if they did then I think they need to 10 to a pa.Jcbiatrist. There ia DO MDII in

people m1king a mockery of relilioa 01' of lnJODe thlt has to do with reli-aion· These people need to

IIOW up. The7 need to start thinking. I doa't think the 1111 wonlct have been that b..t if be would have cb .. ea ecoa• e adler coatuiDe to VIe fur his

' izD't wwtla jerk of JVQIIIIf! I still p1aa • prio the . d•~•• bee1a1e I Hke to . danr.:e, have-fan, and I to fellow lltndinte. I just 1

0 ·OW8 Sheila Holloway hiS re­

eenU, been named IS the editor of THE SOUTH· EASTERN. She is a fi eshman from WUaon and plans to major in business education and sociology. At Wilaon she WIS spe­

cial events editor and WIS

also reapoD11ble for paste­up and page design. T,ypasetting, feature at& ries and editoriala were also her duties on the monthly publication. ' "The equipment and

techniques are different at Southeutern, and the sto­ries are approached from a more serious angle here. Most of our editions were centered around sports at Wilson, because those were our main letivitiea. A lot of our stories were features, all(), "Here, there ia 110 much

more going on, and put· ting out a paper every week ia much more de­minding," she said. Holloway WIS selected

from the staff b7 newspa­per advi8or Rudy M1nley. "Sheila hu shown the

desire I like to see in an editor. She baa been very eonacientioua, and has Jeaa ned our 511tem quick-1)'. She, aleo, has learned to use a ewu era and hiS done son e work in the photo lab. "She has a big job which

reqires mueb of her time, but I think abe will be a good leader for the rest of our at1«," he s1id.

Law, Dance Letter Topics hope these people will start thinking like adults, sinee they are considered adults, instead of thinking like 13-year-olds.

MeUaA ltbaberlin

To till E4lllr.

Following WWll, a Ger­m•n p1ator, Martba Nie­moeller, wt«e thia bit of wisdwn: "Fint, the

camoe after the Jews, and I WIS not a Jew, so I did not

object. Then the7 e~noe after the Cathoiica, and I WIS not a Catholic, so I did not object. Then they eame after tbe trade. unionists and I WIS not a trade unionist, so I did not object.

"Then the7 c1moe after me. and there WIS no one left to object."

to us nctr re•1La1

by by

For tboee of you who believe it's alright to take

• away acwneone to amoke, don't choose remember when one or rights are " I object to into smaller I 'designated areu1

smoking

Tb1nks, Gellltp Krause

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Page 3: Reception Invitation Is To Students - carmine.se.educarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern/Newspapers/1987...-WI· -v ..... ter••ational Students Plan Biz 0 r The 118'1

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Savages er First OIC Loss To No wester•• R ers, 24-20

Northwestern's R•ngen banded the Savages their fint OIC loss Saturday in Alva by the aeon of 24-20. The visiting Savages

gained more n•sbing and passing yardage than their hosts, but the foUr point differeaee ran the Savage reeord to 4-8-2 overall and 2-1 in the eonferenee. P•sses to Jim Bell from Greg Neeee ac.oeounted for eaeh of the acot_ing strikes by the Savages. . The fint eame on 1

14-yard completion with 10:06 left in the secoDd quarter. That, along with L•nee West's extra point, was the iee breaker in the -eontest. · Less than four minutes later, though, the Rang. ers answered with a 62-yarder from Troy Chest­nut to Eugene Jefferson. Jody Bratcher tied it at seven with his extra point kick. After eaeh team traded

punts and pass intercep­tions, the Savages were on the offensive from the NW 27 -yard marker. Five plays later, with

only 40 seeonds left, Neeee again eonneeted with Bell on a 12-yard TD pass. West was good a­pin, and the Savages were out in front 14-7. The Hangen took to the air again and, after comp­leting pasaes of 28, seven and '16, were in position for a field goal try after the ball was spotted on theSE 14. Bratcher's •im was off,

however, and the Savages took their eeven point lead to the loeker room at half-time. Seoring in the third

quarter eame first from the Rangers after the hosts eovered a Savage fumble on the 21-yard line. Leon Scarlett seored from one yard out after Chest­nut bad eonneeted with

Jimmy Johnston on a 20-yard completion. Br atch­er's PAT was good, &Dd only 33 seconds were gooe in the quarter.

-The Rangers kept eoming . and, after putting tqa­her a 10· play drive that eovered 80 yards, Brat­cher booted a 22-yard fieldgoal to run the srore to 17-14 in favor of the Rangers. • On their next pos·

session, the Savages came right back. This time Neeee and Bell team­ed up on a "·yard 8001'ing play. West eouldn't COD· vert the PAT, but the ·Savages held a three point lead 20-17. The deciding TO came as

Jay Smith picked off a Neeee pas. on the Savage 10-yard line, and returned it for a touchdown. With

·13:36 left in the pn:.er Bratcher's kick was good

·and the R•ngers were ahead U-20. The Savages got the ball

two more times, but were . unable to pull ii out. Time lapsed with the·-Savages in

· coatrol of the ball on the NW39.

- Statjstically, the Sav · . ages and Rangers were dose, al"'. Tbe Savqes

-rushed for 161 yarda and paned for 245 more.

·Rangers garnered 132 . yards on the ground and 224 in the air.

. The Savqes were whist­led nine times and fined 85 yards in the coatest. The Rangers were ch1rged 25 yards on three violations. Jim Bell was the big

weapon in the Savage · attaek as be eanpt 10 p•S!Jes for 15 yards. Bell was oamed OIC Player of the Week for outstanding play.

. Linebacker Gary Pear­son led the Savages de-

. fensives attaek as he was credited with eight unas­sisted tackles and six as­sists. Pearson is a junior from Denton, Texas.

Regents Approve $850.6 Million Budget At their regular meeting

on October 28, State Re­gents took a final step in fulfflling their legaloblip-tions to tbe state by approving a budpt of

million whieb roe­fleets the true needs of the State System for Higher Edueatioo for Final budget projeetions

are besed on a tarpted level of funding whieh would bring Oklahoma eolleges and universities closer to the average a· mong like-type institu­tions in seleeted midwe-

stetn states. Regents took a prelimi·

nary step toward the bud­set pro-jection proc:eaa last moath when they approv· ed a reeN""oendatioD to submit a multi-year bud­get-needs Pi'Oitam to the legislature. The Regents' plan projeets an ineremen­tal ir.erear.e in state ap­propriated funds and re­volving fund income eaeh year so that full-funding will oecur in 1991-92. The projeetion for 1988-

89 shows an expected inerease of $75 mDlion

'

over the ew'Jent budpt, of whieb $66 mUtion would eome IN+" state funds &Dd $20 miDioa fzwn student tuition and fees and other revolving fund inec-ne.

. The resulting shortfall would be $27'1 mDlion. For a budget of

$871.4 million ia projeeted with an anticipated abort­fall of $203.2 million. Regents suggest that by 1990-91, a projected bud· get of $892.6 million should have a shortfall of no more than $109.4; in 1991-92 a budget estimate

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of ~.8 ia expected to be fully funded.

Using the budget request as a ba--e and a steady inflation rate of four percent for subae quent yean, Regents pro­ject a g1 adual illerene in both state appropriations and revolving fund in· come. Student fee structures

among regional insti~ nal typ u will al110 be used to determine a reasonable level for such fees in Oklahoma. Budget needs for eaeb of

the institutions are based on individual program costs projeeted for eaeh type institution. Budgets for special programs and other agencies, such as the higher education cen­-ters at Tulsa, Ardmore, and Idabel, are determin­-ed on an individual basis.

·at& uctk-•' pragnme ba 18 col1e1• ud · 'and eifbt eonatitaent .........

A State B.epats' Dilere­-tiMV7._.., ....

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Debaters Are Fourth In KansasTournament The Savage Forensic

Squad attended the Uni­versity of Kansas Fall Debates this weekend at :LawJenee, Kansas. This was the fourth tourna­ment this semester.

proud of it." In the oetofinaJ round

:The debate teams of By­! ron Miller ud Millie AJ. lien, and Erie Marlow and !Ronnie wn.,. were both :in todlpetmoa. Mjller and ·Allen had a preliminary ·reeord of four wins and I four loeses. They bad the

team from William Jewell -College. They WOil the round · on a three 11!1'0

decision. In quvte:finah they were able to eliuri. nate the University of Minnesota on a 2-1.1n the semifinal round they eDd­ed a Josing streak to Central State University with a 3-0 derision. In finals

record to bre•k to octofin. 'met Mac:•'est.er UDiver· ·ala, but ooly 385 of the 413 sity. In a very do II! speakers pc:;ints ne«:es- Southeastern dropped on sary to break. a 3-0 decision. This gave Miller said that .. MDiie them second plaee at KU

and I are finally starting for their second year in a to work well as a team. row. This is our first weekend Wilson eommented,"We to finish at ~ast even. We were finaUy able to start have both worked very winning elimination hard, and it payed off rounds this weekend. This !JOUle this weekend... ·weekend marks two years

Marlow and WU.On CODt· that Eric and I have been inued their record of sue- ·debating together. We've cess this weekend. They both worked very hard, bad a preliminary reeord and if we keep it up, w~ of six wins and two lceses should be able to eontin-Tbey were the . fourth ue doing well." highest team in prelims. This weekend the squaci Marlow won the best will not travel, but neXl

·overall speaker in the weekend they will be tak CEDA division. He noted, ing a full entry to Central "l•st year, I was third State University. AU ten .speaker in junior division squad members should be and that surprised me. eompeting for honors in .This award. however, was debate and individual

total shock. rm very events. =========~~

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Ha u •·ger with all the triltJitJi••gs

or only 99c

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520 N. Fhat

Page 4: Reception Invitation Is To Students - carmine.se.educarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern/Newspapers/1987...-WI· -v ..... ter••ational Students Plan Biz 0 r The 118'1

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collegia~e camou Z E S E N A T A B S W E 0 I

E ' A R A B I C H S I N A 0 E R

S S F 0 P o· R Y S A G A L A M

P S E R. B 0 C R 0 A T I, A N N

E N N N I R R A B I T L M A N

R S A T A K A T M H 0 R I I A

A S T E U V A S U B E L 0 N M

N W E R R I A A E G 0 L N E R

T A B L A 0 N J N G U D A M E

0 H I H 0 I K U N S E I R G

B I T N A· G N 0 M T A A S A A

A L E N 0 0 M I C K Y M S E N

T I B I T I H S I 0 R U K E

E F L E M I S H N A I S R E P

N R U B U R M· E S E N I H C S

Can you find the hidden world languages?

AFRIKAANS ARABIC ARMENIAN BURMESE CAMBODIAN CHINESE DANISH DliTCH ESPERANTO ESTONIAN FLEMISH GERMAN JAVANESE

KOREAN KURDISH LITHUANIAN MALAGASY t«>NGOLIAN PERSIAN POR1UGUESE RUSSIAN SERBO-CROATIAN SWAHILI SWEDISH TIBETAN 1HAI

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....,todoiO. &e.ldee,l •e to make my owa c:blieee."

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Bma.te, a c:aner cr·..-.at, dll eetell a w•rtnla•p Jut •••• Ia .._ t. Ullll ..-.u Ia dae pnperte~hehju1 If..,...... ler • .._ ed twe ._... lb1111d dae............... .... _.......- c.nw _.. . ....................... _,...................... . ....... Wor op S~esses Success I ·tst Thur&day and Fri- guidebook which aceom- impcli tmce of cbooeiDg a

day, Businesa Week and panied the .. Road to Sue- career path apPJ'OPritte to the SOSU Plaeement Off. ceaa" video vipettee that ooe'a pen oe1t interuta ice aponiOI'ed the PlY- were ahoWD tbroupoat aDd aptitude•. mouth Career Search the 1111iocm. '"The AttentioD-Getting Workshop. The firat video vipette a-me" wu the aubjeet Career eonsultant, Bill wu aleaaon in how not to of the third video. Many

Bute, and bia IIIO"iat11, get a job. It depicted the rum•• guideli"el were Scott; Brook uad Vonique giteD audl u '"bow your Adler, preeented the ffiinmitted by bezped- au«flaDCI, ..0 the uper-worbbop to help tba11 and job huntera. It told ieMe and'' Hille you ban, attending ways to deter- bow to help a periOD avoid mine wbieh career is belt dam•rng pitftlle, =the ,_ aiUqu~ for theQII, end bow to an """- 11• . ..11 --t t" • 1 .a-a- .a.u. .,IJilu YCJ'I .. AU eel, aDd lhra.Ji I!IC UU. a atMMn obteining thl& ea- atttled ""Deckllnl Your ~ -.. ...... reu. 1\ttuae: A Tbne Par Some ~ faa" tb aplaiDed the Eacb puticipat ol the Serlo.u~ ~elf-Aeae11- . ..u. af,• .._~., .-...

. ' ... JfCU:~.hop .. xew~t4 .... ... .... ~. Jt~ .~ ......... CrA& • .n.. D.U.-,7:,' ,¥1' • .,,..,. , '

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Gary the Sa captai Texas . A19E

ton Hi lettere linebac All-Oil Defem Year. Defem Year l team,

Dir De Mix-Uj

scribe I les Wa atre pt Bed, 'A for Dec

• p.m. 1

Center, Tickets fora fU dinner This'

atre at added. dinner StudeDI to givt night t

good th ly gooc Night 1 Decem! costing per eou SQSU I

Rig/at band u

• • prom111 and cot with a lor, T· (David knowa his lo, Bland ker), hi • mereu er's eat Howfl'

ens wht • mg 1m

(Dell J meettl that Tt him abc I.ike a

re1atm ~

Page 5: Reception Invitation Is To Students - carmine.se.educarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern/Newspapers/1987...-WI· -v ..... ter••ational Students Plan Biz 0 r The 118'1

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Gary Pearson is one of the Savages football team captains from Denton, Texas. A 1984 graduate of Den­

ton High Sehool, Pearson lettered in footbaJJ as a linebaclter. He reeeived All-District and All-Area Defensive Player of the Year. He was &lao voted Defensive Player of the Year by his high aehool team.

He was Mleeted to play in the on Bowl. The on Bowl consists of 101'* of the better players in Okla­homa playing 10me of the better iD Texea. He attended the Univer­

sity of Tens at Arlington along with Mike Shields and Bruce Porter. He played at UTA for two years and lettered one year. After the athletic program was terminated Pearson went to North Texas for one semester. During the summer of

1986, he was contacted by Southeastern's coach ask­ing him to play for the Savages. Pearson played linebaek­

er when he came to South­eastern and was nominat­ed second team All-Con­ferenee.

Dinner Theatre Sets December Production Mix-up. uad ma;rbem de­

scribe thja leiiOD'I Char--lea Wartbeu Dilmer The-atre prodUetioa of Riglat &d. w,.,., Buband aet for December 8-12 at 6:80 p.m. in the University Center /Theatre Complex. Tickets are $12 per penon for a full-eoune roast beef dinner uad tbe sbow.

This year, however, the­atre at bas added a new feature to ita dinner tbeat re f01 mat: Studen~ Nilht. dealgced to aive stud1nta a fun night of good food uad good theatre ... Ul equal­ly good price. Student Night will be Wednelday, December 9 with tieketa costing $'1 per pei'IOD, $12 per eouple with a eurrent SOSU student ID. Riglat Bed, W.v~~g Bu­

bad is a madeap farce, promising Iota of laughter and confusion, It begins with a fun-loving bache­lor, Ted Merriweather (David Tim!DODI), who knows that by marrying his loviDg fiuaee Ruth Bland (Kebnmna Wal­ker), bil allowanee wiD be inereued from his moth­er's estate. However, the plot tbiek­

ens wben hil ever-invest­ing unde, Martin Jones (Dell Mel pin), wuat to meet tbe Dl w little wife that Ted baa writtell to him •bout::

cboiee before be makes the deeiaion to raise Ted's allowance. The only prob­lem is that Ted and Ruth are not married, and Ruth's father, who is in Europe, bas not given his consent to the marriage yet. When Uncle Martin pops

in unexpectedly, Ted must devise a plan. Of course, be elso just hap­pens to have an unsus­pecting married couple, Claude and Evelyn Stev­ens (Max B•hr and Jamie Rumph), visiting him on vaeation. When Martin arrives and

sees Evelyn instead of Ted's fianeee Ruth, be naturally assumes that Evelyn is Ted's wife. To help Ted, Evelyn and Claude deeide to take part in thi• ma•querade at their own expense.

· AI• helping to suffici­ently confuse not only Unele Martin, but also the plot is Hubert I ·aabwell (Erie Terrell), Ted's drunk friend, who is al-

• • the ways utmng on aeene to end up in the wroq bed at the wroag time, uad Ted's dieiUu­sioced maid, M;rra Taelde­berry (Rub;r Quinn), who never see1111 to know what • • ~ gomg Oil. Confund yet? Good! Come and help IOlve tbe

Riglat Beef, w,., .. , llu­balld cl01mm• and eajoy Like a07 praper eariDg

relative, llutiD wuata to ~·.~ . ,.,... .,~~~~ !*·'•· .... . ' .Ge&e. ....... ' . .. .

Hia major is maa•ge ment with a minor in marketing. He is · .,., a member of the Manage ment and Marketing Club. Pearson will gt actuate

this spring. He bu one more y•r of elisibilfty and should be able to pla;r football as a graduate student next fall. "I like it a lot better here

than at UTA or North Texas, and it's a pretty big ebange from going to a big school. There's a few more tbiDgs to do at a big school," Pearson said. With all the injuries the

Savages have been suffer­ing the team doesn't seem to have suffered very much. "We've been burt quite a bit this year and there's only four of us (linebaeken). Paul Gray's

neek bu bun botb 11 ing him - t.d aad lllJ aboulder's buD bwting. rve been P''J'ing with a fnetand eo""boae," be OOMih"*Dted.

P1aJing uwJer different co•d!es, pla;rers tend to have opinions about their eoeebes. Pear-aoa ec-np=•ed tbe eoaeh­ing of his f01mer eoaeb, Palmer, to that of Coaeh

.Bemy Busken. "Pahner was a more mo­

·tivational kind of eoaeb. He could get you motivat­ed in any kind of situation. Coac:h Buskin isn't much of a motivational type eoacll. He'll tell you what you're doing wrong and tell you bow to ec.t 1 eet it. Buaken is more a teehni­que eoaeb. He believes in playing tbe right teehni-

·que and doing things right," be saki. Coomes put a lot of faith

into their pla;rers. Gil')' Peareoo feels that Coaeh Bn•ll:en bas faith in his

. fellow t.wmm•tes • He nid, .. With Paul ud I

being hurt, eo.eb Busll:en bas faith in pla;ring Joe

·Khoury and Robb;r Wood because there's not mueh differenee in all of us playing wise ... "If we win against East

Central we'll at least share the eonferenee with someone else in OIC. There's still an outside cbanee that we could win the OIC erown. We've still got a ehanee to make the play-offs if we win our last two games. We've also got to rely on North­eastern beating North-

western. We've also got to rely on bow the rank­

r. mgs rome out after our

11ast two games," be s•ict. "We are definitel;r a bet­ter team than our re eord shows."

Unity in a team is very impot tent, especially if you're working towards a certain goal. If the Savag­es ean stay together and work as a team like they have been doing, then win ning the next two games and going to play-offs shouldn't be a problem.

Pearson concluded, "If our team pulls together and plays to our capability then we should be able to win the next two games and possibly go to the play-offs."

Napbleon became the master of a continent without becoming a slave to cigarettes.

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Page 6: Reception Invitation Is To Students - carmine.se.educarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern/Newspapers/1987...-WI· -v ..... ter••ational Students Plan Biz 0 r The 118'1

• •

<

• . ' I

...... ~ TBE -

D Social pbo-

to(ctapby will bit &eu..d by award-wlanlnr ,.._. journalist llarJ Ellen Mark dw inl a ll"dna• and public lectwe tbat opens tbe 1987-88 Scholar-! Leadership Enrichment ' Protcnm,

Stucleata faw" Ok'tiMM"' eoUeps and w.niveraWes will partkipde ill a in­depth five-dq seminer with Mark oa '"Docum-en­tary .. Oeto-ber 23 tbroaP 27. She also will '-rhe Work of llar7 Ellen Mark" iDa lectwe, which - . is h ee and o;en to all iDtemted people at '1:80,

• i

p.m. Mooday, 'Nov. 9, 198'1, iD 200 .Dale Ball, 456; W. LiDdse7 St., on tbe: University of Oklahoma's ·, Norm.-n campus. The •mfnar ia the third:

of eight that will be offer- • ed this academ:ie year through the Scbolar-I..ead­ership Ellf'icbmeDt Pro-. gram, a statewide pro-

N....-.._s,ttd

Ph

u::.ant. Twenty Olrlahum• eoJleps and univ61 iaities · partkipate iD su•:P.

A photojournalist for DiON that 20 yeat'l, Marti will slwe bet upertiae and critique students poi tfolic:J I iD photograph)', environ­DiCntal pocttaiture andi the photo essay. l During tbe p'lt 17 yeat'l,

Mark bu been photo­graphing iD India with subjects ranging hc-11 a communit7 of proetitutes iD Bombay to Mother Te: resa and her MiuioDS ol Charity iD Calcutta. Thej photographs she made iDj Calcutta were published

Savage-Tiger Cla~ic To Decide OIC Throw out se•son · re- successful, but we feel like

' cords, the East central. we'll compete favonbl)'." Tigers com.e to town Sa- I ·lntz said also that the turday and tbe winner of· Tigers, 4-4 overall, have the contest will moat like- the premiere running ly be the cbampioD of the back iD the coaference iD Oklahoma IDteroolleglate running back Rodney Conference. Jackson.

"We've definitely got our Tiger quarterback Jeff hands full this week." said Craig "is a good one" . Savage bead coach Jon according to :Lantz. · Lantz. Craig, a senior, ia iD bia East Central will bring · third year as a starter.,

their untarnished (2-0) "He definitel)' makes their OIC record when they line option offense click," up against the Savages I ·•ntz said. and their 2-1 OIC slate. The Savages will be

" Northeastern, South- without the "'rvices of western and Nortbwes ·running back Corey R•n-tern have lost conferenee som. "He just bad a cast matches, so if we wiD we removed from his leg will loclt up at least a Tuesday, so be won't see share of the conference aetion this week," I ,entz crown," I .antz said. said. "We are happy to be iD Offensive line coaeb Mor-

a position to possibly ria Sloan bu been Io.t to. share the cbamphnahip, the locals as the mult of a and it's possible we could· freak accident in 'the· wiD it outnpt. We must weight NOIIl.

play well, thoiagb, ad a Slon, who was curling' wiD apiDSt Eaet Central 1001b. weiahta nllered a is impw_tant far oor pro- berniateddbc ill.blalower gram," he:uid. ba±. I•nt1 uid thlt 12-Tbe Tigers. led b)' Coach moatba ol pla)'lieal tiler-

Pat O'Neal, haw a peat· apy bu .,._ ~. tradition, IDd llaft - "We've · him de1d lift tbinp rna far tM. that u mueb uiOO so the other tb'• ia ...U,. ._.. to teiiDI do - 1.-.. ... Be ..,......, pf•tned. .,_ ...._ tt·

~ . .-·. ·-·~ ·tliiii ···· Jlj''· · -· · · ··-c.;-~·t , ..... ,

phy Topic Of .

iD U/e ···'""' ad the story "'lotber Ter 111 ill -Calcutta" WOD first ptiae in tbe Univerlit)' of )(fa- :

to devote aloag period of a tine to a ape ~ifloe project ean e iD 1986 under the ... ..,.v... ol a Fulhrigbt· grant, which allowed her to sp ead a Jelr pbo&op'a-· pbing iD Turke)'. Tbe project left her deter­mined to coetinue ~find the t''" e and "'8'"1 to

Over the past three decades, use of our nation's forests has surged dramatically.

But so has vandalism. Signs blasted apart. Trees,

rocks and campsites defaced. Public facilities destroyed.

What will it take to tum the tide against vandalism?

Simple determination. A commitment to ourselves.

And to our young people to help them appreciate he forest for what it really is. A priceless and unparalleled gift.

Vandalism. It's time to draw the line.

F

aeveral ·iidltba iD A•• iD

Give a

Western youth tr):ing to adapt to a culture Will· pletel)' atien to tbeil own. She abo worked iD Nor­thern IrelaDd pboto8ra­pbing bMb Pt6te••nt and Catbatie won ea to por­tra)' the of the war on their Hv•:

c..t. Oa ..... 8

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pollute. Forest Service, US.nA.

Amonf related followill TbeHt

Ul). 1 bazardo labeling bazardo eon taint materia regulati A goo

NatWnll Among Adt&Jt1, mation i

• cocame, !Summar adults I TheAJ

Semitlaf beading educatol

• saences to Augu 1987. Mat 1

F 0

lS DOW I

updated what 'W4

infonnll of scbo lnforma1 the cla~t Mat.

national site liat4 that beat 6). Tb overeo+•• eVents II Thetbell the form light, 8l

Gotle;:liiil on 5 maj provide 1

deal witl strateg)'

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Page 7: Reception Invitation Is To Students - carmine.se.educarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern/Newspapers/1987...-WI· -v ..... ter••ational Students Plan Biz 0 r The 118'1

agto

owu. Nor­

•*•­tuad ,... twar News

Among new and ureful U.S. documents and documents related materials recently acquired by the library are the following items. The Hara·ildo•• Afotellliait Hatlboolc (D105.31:

111). The infot"mation in this booklet will 'Ieist hazardous materials handlers in the identifieation of labeling of ptektgee, plecarding, compatibility of hazardous materials, and identifieation of eome of the containers authorized to be veed for peeking hUII"dous materials. This booklet is to be nnd in conjuetion with regulations eoncerning hazardous materials. A good sonrce for information on drug uae is the

NatiofiGI 1'N111lll ita Dr.g U•e Pftd Relrrted FactoJc Among AtJIIJ:itdll Higl Sclaoot SttuinU artd Yot~wg AdwJt•, 1975-1988 (HF®.8202:Am 3/3/975 86). Infor­mation is listed according to type of drug being used, i.e. cocaine, tleohoL marijuana, etc. Figures, graphs, and !Summaries regarding drug u11ge of seniors and young adults are pnaeated for 1976-86. The AppicaioR ad G•itleiiHu /tiP tle Fw/brtiglat-Har•

SemiiW.IN Ab..oad Prtopatu in the vertical file under the heading, "Fulbript-Haye Prcl.gtam." Thole elilible are educators in fielde of the humanitiee and the soc:i•l scienees. Seminars will be in the eum11 er of 1988, June to August. Deadline for the applicNioo Is December .f, 1987. Mat WOI'b: RU«<fd AboHt TedU., ad~

is now in ita aeeoad edition (ED1.2:W89/3/987). This updated edit;ioa indudea 59 findings ftom reaeareh on what worb when it wmea to edueatiag a ehild. The information in tbia booklet is a distDittion of a large body of sebolarlj r8aeareb in the field of education. Information is bra ken into 8 ""tin cat6101 ie&: the howe, the clllliOOID. and the M011 ia Space: ~ of A~ ideutifiee 25

national histQ it lanclmerb anCI aae Dltim1ll7 ejpifieant site listed aa the Natkteal ReaMer of mew.it PJeeea that beat illnelrate the Man in 8p1ce then e (129.2:1181/ 6). Theee are the lftea· of uftietl overcoming bl"riua to apacentabt aDd of li8Difieut events letdl ... ~the lint ··--••ar of a man Oil the .. ..,.. The theme npn11Dted bJ th111 litea atarta in 191& with the formal bertaatnp of A" 11 ka'a t.eehNJioa~al bue for light, exteDda to 1972 with the ClODCillaiaa of man'a

'

succeeaful uplaratioa of the .. ..,., aDd indudee the UDmiDDed aeieatifle of the earth, pltneta, and soltr 8J&te•n. Many Mle have problem• ~ teehnittl repc.~ ta.

A GWl. to l.oc1eillg T...., Rqoru ita U.S. Gov~ PII611JaeioHI Coacciou afv• iDfcw mtdoa on 5 major indez•. The purpoae of this doeun eat is to provide aid aDd auppc'll t to tbo11 who are attempting to deal with the11 materiala by outlining a general aeareh strategy for the retrieval of teehnital repGi ts. An overview of the 5 major indues ia priiiDted with IC)!Ine disenssiclll of the problem• inherent in the bibJioaraphie control of the literatwe. Tbia ~ ean be found in the vertical file tmder the beading "Teehnital MfDual."

.......... 5 an evening of eomedy, eonfusioa and Chri8tmu

'·a..a:~- .. 1.-.L...- cwsme. ---Of&.:.......... Reeervatims mu.t be . ...., ._. m1de in ldvance. b7 eaJI-

......,. .... .._ ing f24.0121 at. 217, or pelllt. # ~ by viaitiDg the theatre ae.t flu llr offioce aa the top flool' of '•-. W. .a llary at the Univerait7 Center be--..- ....... I a.& • tween the hours of 2 p.m.

aew .. "'lt'a ,_.._.a..., pluto ..... a ree.& ,........._ 'n. ................ by tM ...,._ Ftllldftl w11 "Ire d. .... ~ .apt at ... tM .. .. ...

Cateer From Page4

or phone eall. This is the most powerful job-aeareh tactie ... Daesejng for Sue­eess" wu displayed in a fifth video preaentation, and simple tipa were giv­en on how both men and women would dress for an interview, or on the job. At the Friday IDOI'Ding

session, the speakers add­ed a little humor to the

dress portion of the work­shop. Mr. Brook•. wore a polka dbtlld tie thet bung to hie bees, and Ma. Adler wore a witch's hat to bring out the Hallo­ween spirit. The lest video vignette

emphasi•ed the import­tanee of proparing for the job interview. Helpful hints such u researching the eompany, eliminating

• nervous manner11ms, show aelf -eonfidenee, and

season to

N......._S,ltll

tice." were presented. Anyone wishing to •

tain a Career SeaPCl {)Uiebook or ~ Plr­"''fttl G•ide To Bw1rlilag Retaiu m1y do 10 in die placement office located iD the Administration IMeild-• mg. Immediately following

Frid1y's mornh-.lellion, Mr. Bute, teem leader for the southern gtoup, spoke to Barbara Rackley's "Careers" c-. about the

ol8elf

• e 0

ments.

.. A person needs to store his self assessments in a storage bank ... said Bute, "because you will need to refer to it when preparing for an interview."

Bute allowed open dis­cussion with the students. and he answered quest· ions pertaining to the various types of careers involved with their ma· JOTS.

••• The Southeaster•• will run Ch•·ist•t•as

Greeti••gs in the Dece r Issue. Any group, organization or individual may subn•it a holiday message. Deadli••e is 12 noon, N 17. No late ·messages will he

accepted. Ca•·ds will he published on a • 18 • come,

Callie Retn8Chner

, -~u I p.a · and 5 .m. • • • • • • ' ' •..a • • • • •-• • • • • • • • • • ~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • R • • • • • • • • e -.4 -, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . .. • e 'a • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e1 -, .. r• • • }!""r" --;!l"'f!". , • :rl .,..,..~.'":. •• •. •;,.· .. - . .. • '

\

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Page 8: Reception Invitation Is To Students - carmine.se.educarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern/Newspapers/1987...-WI· -v ..... ter••ational Students Plan Biz 0 r The 118'1

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'

P.p8 'Ifill! ~1,1 ...

0 Gover••or Vetoes Bill On Condom tiOn

The Old•hwna latercol- mut'I•U7 "'CDDI'"NUI re-1-tioaehip. ad education. The OIL · bills did not address theae iaues.

le~ (OIL)

y

Gumm also l'jcl:

straed b)' ... fnclivi­du•ls, DO •IUar what the iDtent of the author, u

• 8DrJOI''aa'ng aex. --Coadom:s are not 100111

effective ill the prevention of AIDS and the nn of them eould give the naers a falae aeue of security.

--Coadoms are readily available from private lec­

tor businesaes. --There is no guaruatee

condoms dt•l ributed un­der the auspices of the sta'ie would not be used in homosexual aetivity, which is illepl under state law.

. When asked about the mealliJ'el. eonaidered by several university student

' govet omenta whieb would put condoms on c•mpus,

· includiDg Central State Universitx's, Gumm said ·he was oppcaed to any such measure. "We definitely need to

deal with the AIDS epi-. demie, but eoadotns are not the anawer," Gumm said. "If the bill lad

Advea•ti~ting

. Never Be A

In .The Southeasteisn

sosu TRASH

edueatioa as the cure of it inste.d of eoDdoms, I would have happily siped it. If you ha~ received AIDS educMion and place yow nlf ill a hiP risk group, at lnat you did not

· do it A&li ipanace." The OJrl•h+l'l lldeleol­

le iate I w'c'atll!'e is a • • •

"-odellegislature brad Oil

the w•kiap ol the Okla­homa state Jeplature. It is the oldest uad Jarp.t statewide stud81lt pan­ment CJI'Ianintioa in Okla­homa. OIL "eeta every • regular 1emester to CODii-

der the Jl('inta of tiew of repreaeutativea fwm 18 institutions of higher edu­cation both public and private. OIL delegates represent over 96,000 stu­dents ill thoee inlititu­tions. Gumm is a graduate stu­

dent in politieal science at Central State Univt~rsity ill Edmond. He re asived a baehelor of arts in politieal science from Southealte1 n State University ill Du-, rant wbere be •"ed as student president. A 1982 graduate of Durant High Sebool. Gnii•• 1ervecl aa Speakv of the OIL Bouse of Repre111ltativea &om 1984 UDtil 1ut +ins when he was elected Go­verDVt. Gab•• Ia •'• listed in Outatanding Y 04mg Men ill A met lea for 1986-1987.

Don't I Oops!! ... .,..... .......

of 1'HE '801JTRII!A8· 'ltitN It .... .......

1 tllatF ...... ..._ ..... •••r••....._._. ................. F ...... ....._ ••t .................

ltl8 ............... .., ........... .................. _, ......

Savages ............

won't .be blek this aea-1011," he Slid.

Although Lants dia­euaaed the iDjwwa,_ he dida't chrel1 OD them. i Ria

' mind 18 Oil the OIC ella•

The rlnlrJ betwe81l the two is well known. ripta· are OD the liDe alollr with that OIC aown. .. East Cnltlal il ahraya a

big but thie f8 the first tiii e South nat u n has been ill a pOiitiaD 1o win the ebampioaahip. Our plaJerl WUlt it and our eo cbea do, too," the eoaeb added.

Give a DOn't pollute.

Docurnenta•·y ~ ......

Her photop'apba have resulted in numerous ex­hibitms u wellaseeveral boot•, includingPaaapost, whieb coatains picturea bum her fh It 10 yell'S of photographing; A• 11 it'll II lwlgu, a paa ttayal of teen-ap pregaaney; and. Wm 81, a reflt.tioaD of the a»'lietilil and

of won en ill a m••lnauna lltultt ward of a state mental hoepital. Mark's photo• Oil nma­

way ehD•h en was pvNfeh­ed in Life mapnne'a July 1908 isne with the story cl•imiag a Robert F. Ken­nedy A ward and the Ca­non Photo Eaayist A­ward. She has photographed in

Ethiopia Oil allignna.ant for Life mapnne witb the reaulting article published in May 1986. .

jn•pw t•-a Ia •hc•t'nl fuDda, the aew· method

the iDII*t of enroiJmeat flaw II by COD·

sidering •••a•••' easta beyODd hasie w•k·londa. The final budget alao

ineoaporatea nveral ill­eentivea for iastitut ioa• to eneourap ia...,.ative pro-81 am development and external reeeudl ..

••• •• ALL QUALITY

• •

M.onday Munctl Madness •

YS·

M)IO Dan*lo .. hal ID fOil. _, .. m 1 11 ...... ,~ ..... ., ... , .. ~.,..IIJ'cicw•. ...... ..,,... .. it. . ...... ln ..... 10 we cen IJIIJ dlll!ter Jll"' hal pine In III • • I "I 30 IM\UIII No tiCMD"' .. goad Mbtei, 10 Cll DDudnD._ pljp r tDtiJ J•

IIUI 924-1350

1410 N. 1at, Dlnnt Moun: 11 --1- Sun.· Thurs. 11 --2- Fri. & Sot .

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