durant, okla., thursday, july 16,1964 texoma· music camp ...carmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/the...

4
-shot two "On e, we !8 of play- lorna\ ' the year. ld be !rv&- ; ball. e on i!fons, se. t by the l&m- Rus- fav- , he earn bu\1 cted npic ate; ;ity; Bill DURANT, OKLA., THURSDAY, JULY 16,1964 NO. 34 A MO'DIEB AND DAUGHTER oombiDatloa tile Indlaa Galdance WOI'bhop Ia MN.Irelle Heard aDd daqlater S1JMIMIA, Harte- home. Mn. Heanl Ia a tuli-Ume employee of .JODM A.-Jemy whDe !!'9l"nne Is a elementary te.cber aDd t.eadiefJ art dlll'lng the summer at the academy. Health Specialists Speak To Indian.School Workers r 'f# Their teachers are important, of course. But every bit as important to the children are those Indian Bureau em- ployees who spend twice as much time with the boys and girls as do the teachers. Convictions concerning the im-•'------ ---- - --- portance of the rolee of house par- I G •tt d Ch .,d ents, ntght attendants, , guidance 1 e 1 workers, and other nonteaching ' . peffOnnel i n Indian-- boarding / s b cf sclibols and donnitories prompted 5 U Je the guidance study now in pro- gress at Southeastern. Of D In 1963 the Indian Bureau ISCUSSIOn operated 264: schools with an en- rolment of 4:3,435. In addition. 4,- "The Gifted Child" discussion 082 children were living in donni- climaxed the five-day special edu- tories while they attended public cation workShop Friday. Dr. M. K. achools. Fort, SSC education professor, be- In connection with those chil- gan the Friday program discussing who are transported from "Identifying the Gifted Child". boarding homes to public The sse education professor ex- ICDUUIJS, one of last week's discuas- plained that more is being done to- gave housemothers this day for the average and below suggestio n average child and less attention is can be applied to after- focused on the gifted child. situations in general. Miss Elizabeth McKinney, SSC ''Don't be counting the laundry education professor, followed Dr . they come home from school. Fort's dl8cU88ion. Kiss McKinney on welcomillg them spoke on "Providing for the Gift- let them know someone is ed Child in Elementary School". · .-.KUJtg fo-r them." She emphasized that today's speakers of the first classroom environment and in- -were Dr. John O'Hara, direc- atruction are much different from ot the leadership traiD1Dg cen- that of the past. "One of the out- at the University of Oklahoma; standing characteristics of the . Dean Harris, clinical gifted child is creativeness", Miss tor of the Muskogee Guidance Cen- McKinney says. ter. She continued, "Other outstand- Also Leslie P. Towle, Anadarko tng features of this type of child director, and Dr. Sara include eagerness to learn and Oklahoma State Univer- I natural quickness for relation- sociologist. ships." AD areas ot Indian heiLlth, which ''One of the chief principles for in the spotlight at the work- teachers is to be enthusiastic and this week, are the concern of joyful about ·a child's creativity", BIA and · the PubUc Health. continued the Southeastern pro- of the South- feasor. study. In 190:S medical · Other Friday speakers included and health services for In- Dr. Earnest Sturch, physical sci- were transferred to PHS in ence professor, w h o discussed department of health, edu- "Providing for the Gifted in Sci- and welfare. ence an d Kathematics". Ruth On the roeter of speakers this Hatchett, Englillh professor, spoke two representativee of on "ldentlfying the Gifted in Eng- Health Area Office in Ush" and Dr. Louis Johnson, his- City. Doris Langman, toJ:)' professor, di8cus8ed "Identur,- 111m1tritiomilat. l8 IICbeduled to llpe&k lng the Gttted In Social Studies · , 'l'lrln"84ilaY. Mary F. Levt&l, nurae Dr. Pat Powers, education pro- at the Oklahoma City of- feasor, served aa workahop dJrec- tor. The coaterence drew a large (See ONE, Pace 3) group of pertlclpuU. , Englsh Students Learn Gra•• By VIewing Sides Texoma · Music Camp Draws H. S. Students Engliah st.udenta took a break from the usual clusrom routine Jut week by meet1ng' classes in the air-conditioned comfort of the Little Theater. Seventy-five high school musicians 2S schools have already enrolled for the Texoma Music Camp scheduled for July 19-26 at sse. The switch was made to make use of the theater's projector and screen. Students studied grammar by viewing slides which showed the function of parts of speech. . More students were expected to register for the camp before the deadline date, according to camp director and SSC band conductor Lloyd Co_ok. Sentence patterns were also shown. The alldea were explained by Dr. E. E. Slaughter, English professor. Heading the band, choral, and twirling departments of the camp respectively are Donald Moore of Baylor, Douglas McEwen of the University of New Mexico, and Austin Lovell of Arlington. Texas: Students enrolled in the camp are Carol Silver, Darrell Courtney, Third Math InstitUte· To Open This Weekend One Southeastern National Science.Foundation mathe- matics institute closes this weekend another, the third of the summer, gets under way. Selected high school students, who have been working in new mathematics for the past six weeks, end their study Friday. With the high school students with elementary mathematics, is leaving, elementary school person- attracting stud:ents from a particu- nel from throughout the nation. - and from Canada-will begin their larly wide area. concentrated study. . In addition to Oklahoma. par- With the regular course of the - July 20-August 21 institute limited ticipants will be from Kansas, to enrolled participants, a work- Iowa, Arkansas, Texas, Louisiana, shop August 10-14 will be open to Michigan, connecticut, MlnnetJOta, other persons interested in modem approaches to gradeschool Ohio, Alabama, Georgia, Cali- matics. f o ·r n i a ; Idaho, Massachusetts, Dr. Leslie Dwight, Southeast- · Nebraska· Kentucky New York, ern mathematics chairm.an and . ' . ' Brenda DeVore, Ada Louise Good- man, Georgia Ann Gibson, Dau Lasater, Toni Kilpatrick, John Kil- patrick, Durant Karl Kizer and Jeane Kennedy, Ardmore; Don carpenter, Norm&D; Nadana Bradfield, David Minton, and Vicki Varner, Walters; Karen White Seminole; and Huck Wall- ing, Velma. Linda Jones, Charlotte Burn- ham, Donna Nelson, and Jackie Gilbert, Eufaula; Joe Stafford, Stanley Jones, and Ronnie Rich- erson, Wewoka; and Janie Berry- hill , Fletcher. Charolette Johnson, Linda carol Burns, Jane Cherry, Jimmy Clem- ons, Rodger Clemons, and Davalyn McClure, Davis; Lynnetta Stewart and "David Gibson, Cyril; and Bob Williams and Ronnie Clark, Ida- bel . . Mclntosh, ... Leffel Bill, Jean- ne Tabor, Gayle Bryant, Tim En- gel, and Ronnie Mansour, Talihina; Jennifer Pate, RatlHf City; Sally Ann Yarbrough. Marietta; and Delma Lou Cole, Pernell. Herschel Beard, Bill Burgess, and Pam Williams, Madill; Roger D. Parham, Poteau; and Jim Gold, Sheila Duncan, Patty Jackson, and Jimmy Hale, Duncan;' Genie Morrell, Ed.winna Wilson, Bettie Hock, Phyllis Gray, and Jo Lasiter , Kingston; LaWanda Nel- son, Karen Christie, Pat Jones, Janice Fina, Judy Underwood, Cin- (See TWO, Page 2) director of the college's NSF pro- Flonda , Wa.shi!lgton, Mississippi, gram in his field, believes the . and from Canada. workshop will be of significant help and interest. Dr. Edwina Deans, mathematics specialist with t he U.S. Office of · Education, and W. K. :MQNabb, St. Mark's School, Dallas, will be workshop consultants. ' Dr. Deans, a national figUre in · mathematics study, will be here August 10-12. McNabb, well known from earlier visits to the campus, will conduct the study August 13-14. A of the School Mathematics Study Group textbook-writing team, Mc- Nabb is also author of other text- book materials. He is &.lso officially involved in the national program of advanced placement of high school mathe- matics students. The workshop meetings, August 10-14, will be from 1 to 3 p.m. in the auditorium of the administra- tion building. The elementary institute, the only one in the state and one of Lots Of Melon At Annual Feast Although attendance this year was slightly smaller than usual, the Student Senate sponsored wa- termelon feast Thursday night was voted a big succeaa. ._ truckload of watermelons was deVoured by hungry Southeastern students, faculty members, a n d their families. The feast was held as usual In the college amphitheater, well suited to accomodate both students and watermelons. "Tbis is the amallest crowd I can remember seeing at one of these feuta," said Mrs. C&theyn Green, faculty member . .As a ruult those wllo attended received their full share, ud then aome. THE OI..OCK SAYSIO:II ... It'• time for ldP 8llllaool ..&1111 I Ia to fake a coke ..... _ Ia jJWaae ue _... ca-u-, Yalla; Hale, Patterwoa, c.llt.; David () twe, B ..... Uld .Jolua W. utt-. Mal'let;ta. ,. • .

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Page 1: DURANT, OKLA., THURSDAY, JULY 16,1964 Texoma· Music Camp ...carmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern... · -shot two "On e, we !8 of ~the play-lorna\ ' the year. ld be !rv&;ball

-shot two "On

e, we !8 of ~the play-

lorna\ ' the

year. ld be !rv&­;ball. e on i!fons, se.

~ t by

the l&m­

Rus­fav-, he earn nor~

bu\1

cted npic ~oot,

ate; ;ity; Bill

DURANT, OKLA., THURSDAY, JULY 16,1964 NO. 34

A MO'DIEB AND DAUGHTER oombiDatloa atten«"n~ tile Indlaa Galdance WOI'bhop Ia MN.Irelle Heard aDd daqlater S1JMIMIA, Harte­home. Mn. Heanl Ia a tuli-Ume employee of .JODM A.-Jemy whDe !!'9l"nne Is a ~ome elementary te.cber aDd t.eadiefJ art dlll'lng the summer at the academy.

Health Specialists Speak To Indian. School Workers

r'f# Their teachers are important, of course. But every bit as important to the children are those Indian Bureau em­ployees who spend twice as much time with the boys and girls as do the teachers.

Convictions concerning the im-•'--------------portance of the rolee of house par- I G •tt d Ch .,d ents, ntght attendants, , guidance 1 e 1 workers, and other nonteaching ' . peffOnnel i n Indian-- boarding / s b • cf sclibols and donnitories prompted 5 U Je the guidance study now in pro-gress at Southeastern. Of D • •

In 1963 the Indian Bureau ISCUSSIOn operated 264: schools with an en-rolment of 4:3,435. In addition. 4,- "The Gifted Child" discussion 082 children were living in donni- climaxed the five-day special edu­tories while they attended public cation workShop Friday. Dr. M. K. achools. Fort, SSC education professor, be-

In connection with those chil- gan the Friday program discussing who are transported from "Identifying the Gifted Child". boarding homes to public The sse education professor ex-

ICDUUIJS, one of last week's discuas- plained that more is being done to-tea.u"'''~ gave housemothers this day for the average and below

~·ught-pn:,vokil1tg suggestio n average child and less attention is can be applied to after- focused on the gifted child. situations in general. Miss Elizabeth McKinney, SSC

''Don't be counting the laundry education professor, followed Dr. they come home from school. Fort's dl8cU88ion. Kiss McKinney

~CcllllC!~t:ra1te on welcomillg them spoke on "Providing for the Gift­let them know someone is ed Child in Elementary School". ·

.-.KUJtg fo-r them." She emphasized that today's speakers of the first classroom environment and in­

-were Dr. John O'Hara, direc- atruction are much different from ot the leadership traiD1Dg cen- that of the past. "One of the out­at the University of Oklahoma; standing characteristics of the

. Dean Harris, clinical coo~ gifted child is creativeness", Miss tor of the Muskogee Guidance Cen- McKinney says. ter. She continued, "Other outstand-

Also Leslie P. Towle, Anadarko tng features of this type of child agen~y director, and Dr. Sara include eagerness to learn and

AIYflr•~r, Oklahoma State Univer- I natural quickness for relation-sociologist. ships."

AD areas ot Indian heiLlth, which ''One of the chief principles for in the spotlight at the work- teachers is to be enthusiastic and this week, are the concern of joyful about ·a child's creativity", BIA and · the PubUc Health. continued the Southeastern pro­

,c~aponsors of the South- feasor. study. In 190:S medical · Other Friday speakers included

and health services for In- Dr. Earnest Sturch, physical sci­were transferred to PHS in ence professor, w h o discussed

department of health, edu- "Providing for the Gifted in Sci-and welfare. ence an d Kathematics". Ruth

On the roeter of speakers this Hatchett, Englillh professor, spoke two representativee of on "ldentlfying the Gifted in Eng­Health Area Office in Ush" and Dr. Louis Johnson, his-

.uou~ City. Doris Langman, toJ:)' professor, di8cus8ed "Identur,-111m1tritiomilat. l8 IICbeduled to llpe&k lng the Gttted In Social Studies · ,'l'lrln"84ilaY. Mary F. Levt&l, nurae Dr. Pat Powers, education pro­

at the Oklahoma City of- feasor, served aa workahop dJrec­tor. The coaterence drew a large

(See ONE, Pace 3) group of pertlclpuU.

,

Englsh Students Learn Gra•• By VIewing Sides

Texoma· Music Camp Draws H. S. Students

Engliah st.udenta took a break from the usual clusrom routine Jut week by meet1ng' classes in the air-conditioned comfort of the Little Theater.

Seventy-five high school musicians fro~ 2S schools have already enrolled for the Texoma Music Camp scheduled for July 19-26 at sse.

The switch was made to make use of the theater's projector and screen. Students studied grammar by viewing slides which showed the function of parts of speech.

. More students were expected to register for the camp before the deadline date, according to camp director and SSC band conductor Lloyd Co_ok.

Sentence patterns were also shown. The alldea were explained by Dr. E. E. Slaughter, English professor.

Heading the band, choral, and twirling departments of the camp respectively are Donald Moore of Baylor, Douglas McEwen of the University of New Mexico, and Austin Lovell of Arlington. Texas:

Students enrolled in the camp are Carol Silver, Darrell Courtney,

Third Math InstitUte · To Open This Weekend

One Southeastern National Science.Foundation mathe­matics institute closes this weekend ~nd another, the third of the summer, gets under way.

Selected high school students, who have been working in new mathematics for the past six weeks, end their study Friday.

With the high school students with elementary mathematics, is

leaving, elementary school person- attracting stud:ents from a particu­nel from throughout the nation.­and from Canada-will begin their larly wide area. concentrated study. . In addition to Oklahoma. par-

With the regular course of the -July 20-August 21 institute limited ticipants will be from Kansas, to enrolled participants, a work- Iowa, Arkansas, Texas, Louisiana, shop August 10-14 will be open to Michigan, connecticut, MlnnetJOta, other persons interested in modem approaches to gradeschool math~- Ohio, Alabama, Georgia, Cali-matics. f o ·r n i a ; Idaho, Massachusetts,

Dr. Leslie Dwight, Southeast-· Nebraska· Kentucky New York, ern mathematics chairm.an and . ' . '

Brenda DeVore, Ada Louise Good­man, Georgia Ann Gibson, Dau Lasater, Toni Kilpatrick, John Kil­patrick, Durant

Karl Kizer and Jeane Kennedy, Ardmore; Don carpenter, Norm&D; Nadana Bradfield, David Minton, and Vicki Varner, Walters; Karen White Seminole; and Huck Wall­ing, Velma.

Linda Jones, Charlotte Burn­ham, Donna Nelson, and Jackie Gilbert, Eufaula; Joe Stafford, Stanley Jones, and Ronnie Rich- ~ erson, Wewoka; and Janie Berry­hill, Fletcher.

Charolette Johnson, Linda carol Burns, Jane Cherry, Jimmy Clem­ons, Rodger Clemons, and Davalyn McClure, Davis; Lynnetta Stewart and "David Gibson, Cyril; and Bob Williams and Ronnie Clark, Ida­bel . . Ri~ Mclntosh, ... Leffel Bill, Jean­

ne Tabor, Gayle Bryant, Tim En­gel, and Ronnie Mansour, Talihina; Jennifer Pate, RatlHf City; Sally Ann Yarbrough. Marietta; and Delma Lou Cole, Pernell.

Herschel Beard, Bill Burgess, and Pam Williams, Madill; Roger D. Parham, Poteau; and Jim Gold, Sheila Duncan, Patty Jackson, and Jimmy Hale, Duncan;'

Genie Morrell, Ed.winna Wilson, Bettie Hock, Phyllis Gray, and Jo Lasiter, Kingston; LaWanda Nel­son, Karen Christie, Pat Jones, Janice Fina, Judy Underwood, Cin-

(See TWO, Page 2) director of the college's NSF pro- Flonda, Wa.shi!lgton, Mississippi, gram in his field, believes the . and from Canada. ~------------workshop will be of significant help and interest.

Dr. Edwina Deans, mathematics specialist with t he U.S. Office of · Education, and W. K. :MQNabb, St. Mark's School, Dallas, will be workshop consultants. '

Dr. Deans, a national figUre in· mathematics study, will be here August 10-12.

McNabb, well known from earlier visits to the campus, will conduct the study August 13-14. A m~ber of the School Mathematics Study Group textbook-writing team, Mc­Nabb is also author of other text­book materials.

He is &.lso officially involved in the national program of advanced placement of high school mathe­matics students.

The workshop meetings, August 10-14, will be from 1 to 3 p.m. in the auditorium of the administra­tion building.

The elementary institute, the only one in the state and one of

Lots Of Melon At Annual Feast

Although attendance this year was slightly smaller than usual, the Student Senate sponsored wa­termelon feast Thursday night was voted a big succeaa.

._ truckload of watermelons was deVoured by hungry Southeastern students, faculty members, a n d their families.

The feast was held as usual In the college amphitheater, well suited to accomodate both students and watermelons.

"Tbis is the amallest crowd I can remember seeing at one of these feuta," said Mrs. C&theyn Green, faculty member . .As a ruult those wllo attended received their full share, ud then aome.

THE OI..OCK SAYSIO:II ... It'• time for ldP 8llllaool ..&1111 I Ia to fake a coke ....._ Ia • jJWaae ue _... ca-u-, Yalla; ~ Hale, Patterwoa, c.llt.; David () twe, B ..... Uld .Jolua W. utt-. Mal'let;ta. , . • . ~

Page 2: DURANT, OKLA., THURSDAY, JULY 16,1964 Texoma· Music Camp ...carmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern... · -shot two "On e, we !8 of ~the play-lorna\ ' the year. ld be !rv&;ball

THE SOUTHEASTERN, Durant, OlclahonuJ THURSDAY, JULY 16,1964

The Southeastern Official organ of the Southe~em College 8880Clation publiabed

weekly during every month of the year except "June, July and August at Durant, Oklahoma, in the interest of Southeastern State College, Durant, Oklahoma, and of higher education.

Second Class Postage Paid at Durant, Oklahoma

STAFF

Editor .... . . .. . ...... . ............. . ....... .. ....... Fred Fagaa A 't Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . W. B. Daugherty Business 1\lgr, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . (}arol Cearley Phot<~grapht>r . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Chuck Choate .~d,iser . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . l\lary M. Frye

TAFF--Jant' Morr1m·. Carol Corley, Ann Ha~·es, herry Gillham. JoyN' Gra,·e , BN'nda Joh.ru.on, Jud~' Lockwood, Ruth Young Rcbeeal Dickin on. Beulah Lowt'ry. John McCaln, Jo Black, Jo Bess Jackson.

Shut Yo' Mouth, Diz/ I I

CORE, usually known as the Congress of Racial Equal- ; ity. a". umed a different group of words for it initials last week ... namely Congres of Restricted Emancipation. ' At least, an act this group sponsored made it deserving of such a monicker.

CORE demanded that Dizzy Dean- ba eball's most colorful announcer-abstain from saying good things about Mi i ippi or Mississippians. The group's spokesmen threatened the Falstaff Brewing Corporation with dem­on tration and a nation-wide boycott against its product, Fal taff Beer.

The company complied. CORE could threaten freedom of peech and its constitutional meaning but it evidently hit the Fal taff folks where it hurt-in the pocketbook.

The CORE group has been involved in controversy be­fore. In Kan a City last year, CORE demanded a school walkout while the NAACP discouraged it. CORE's modus operandi is ge,nerally: (1) always make demands (2) never compromi e and (3) be disagreeable frequently. It's a policy remarkably like Moscow's.

At any rate, this latest and succesSful demand discour­age a many freedoms as it encourages. It also ·casts doubt on whether there are some fine, lawful citizens among the raci t in the state. There are. ·

.Because of the principles involved-namely that of free peech-CORE was shamefully wrong in making the de­

mand but no more than Falstaff w;as in yielding. By follow­ing such procedures, there will not be enough freedoms left to promote a good demonstration or boycott.

Summer School Blues

MEMBERS OF Cathryn Green'• play production class, above.. relleane a scene from Thornton \Vilder's ''Happy Journey." The clau wUl pre­sent this play Tuesday along with Edward Albee's "Salldbox,. aad DeLa. Torre's "Goodbye, Miss Uzzle BordeiL" Student& ln the "Happy Journey" production are, left to right, staadlng, Delores Walker aad .Ruth Young. Seated are Dana. McDougald, George Sayre, Bill Mciver, and- La.wanda. Chane~·. Instrutor Green is standing with her back to the camera..

Dra.ma Class Schedules

I Roving Repc;rte~ I Everyon~ knows that wom­

en's fashions are as change­able and sometimes as radic­al as the weather in Okl8tho­ma. Now, however, a rtew style swimsuit has . b e ~ 1J ereat~9 that is incompar~ble to anything since before the Victorian . Age. · In Pallas,

. Texas, these "top-less" bath .. ing-suits are not only selling, but selling so well that in many stores they have ~'sold­out". What ate the feelings of the students of sse ~e­garding this new controv~ .. sial fashion? We decided to get some general opm~ons around campus. ~ere. they are:

1 Bill Young- ! think they''re .... on men. Bob Lowranc~Us, . . I don't k~w

I haven't seen any yet. I sure wouldn't let my wife wear one .... Somebody else, maybe •.

Ola Fa.ye· Diggs-I think ... if you I quote r:te, I'll ta.ke you off my friend-list.

Claudia Earp-! think they're ridi­culous, and anyone who wears them needs to have their heAd examined. ,.

Val Corley-You know better than to ask me that!

Mrs. Garner, College Coffee Shop -Depends a lot on who's wearing them.

Claud Whitcomb--They're silly ... I don't think they'll become a culturenorm.

· Pattye MoMahon- They're ridicu-lous! \

Tuesday Night Program ~ Larrl~~~e!./~~~~~~~~.~rls Billy Shields-They're ridiculous \

Three one-act plays will be pre- I one act plays. The author, ;Edward .... I don't think they w~ ever be sented at 8 p.m. Thursday in the ~be~, comments on Amencan. so-l worn by anyone w1th any tie 'rheater of the fine arts build- Clety s treatment of the aged. sense .... I ~ouldn't want my ing to an invited audience. Representing the aged is Gran- ~ sister weanng one.... I

The. plays, under supervision of ny played by Annette Choate. Mrs. Cathryn Green, drama in- Mommy, by Brenda Johnson and ~) 1

plo.y production class. the .American society. The Young J hn' Mai"lbox Man, played by Dale Jacks<ln, is 0 5 structor, will feature students of Daddy, by Bill Mciver, symbolize 'I : I

The first presentation, "Good- perhaps the "Angel of Death", ~ bye, Miss Lizzie Bord~" by De La. interesting aspect of the play is .

''S h 1 · l'k be' h t t f " Torre features Beulah Lowery as th . al . t t th "-------------: ummer sc oo lS 1 e mg s o ou o a cannon says 1\"' L ' . B d dB tt M e mus1c accompammen o e d '11 ... Iss l.ZZle or en an e Y a- action Dear Mom and Dad Dr. Lee Ball, English professor and most stu ents WI han as her sister, Emma Borden. · . •

agree. Sharon Joines is the maid and 1 Student directors of the ~ee Well only two more weeks to go Murtha Patterson as the news-

1

plays are BreGnda Johsnson, Thde and I' wili have cOmpleted one Skii!lg, wimming and other summer recreatio~ must Sand Box"· eorge ayre an d J I 'f . t' paper !'eporter. R th- y ~g "The Happy Jour- I short term of my college carelr.

be forgotten fo r June aR u Y 1 you are a consc1en IOUS The play is an?ther revelation n~", . : n d • Martha Patterson, I Some movie . folks f:r:om Da.lla.s college tudent. . or '':.ha~ happened m the tlue story "Goodbye Miss Lizzie Borden". are h~re makmg a p1cture and

From the fil"t day, the fa t pace is set. You have !:lever- of Lizzte Borden who has been ac- ' I got m one of the campus scenes. cused of chopping h er step-mother I stood right next to a senior boy

al choice . Drop those hardest clas e , drop out entirely, and father to death ,vith an axe. and we held hands. Just think! fl-unk or work work, work, and maybe you will pass: ' ''Bappy Journey" by Thornt01\ Congressman Albert . ~illions of people will see me hold-

One con olation is the air-conditioning (when it's work- Wilder is a light, humorous story mg hands, Wlth a grown man. ing Right! College book store employees? ) Also, you have of a family on a trip from Newark ( I ~ I Sf If Please don t tell Dad.

to Camden, New Jersey; to Visit 0 gra Ull es a I went to the lake this week-August to r~lax and wi h you had done the opposite of what- their married daughter .. who is 1·e- ' end and got sunburned. I hope, I e\·er choice you made. But this may even be impossible for ·a covering from a recent "opera- Q f fd•t • I 1 tan and don't p~aL S?me girls h.d cho en f ew whose school begins in early August. tion". n ecen I orll ! a party last mght 1';1 my room.

· . . · The :Iamily consists of Pa, play- ~ 1 They were up all mght talking When tude.nts begm to wonder If It IS really wortJ:t all ed by George Sayre, and Ma, who An edi torial in a recent isaue ~bout boys. I .have some very

the effort, th~nk about the heated classro~s nex~ wmter 1 is played by Lawa.nna Chancey. of The Southea ·tern earned con- 1 unportant questiOns to ask when the cold cold snow is falling (and temperature too!) The 15-year-old daughter is played I gral}.llations from the office of i when I get home. . and we're safe and nug with the sniffles, cold and penu- by Dana M~Dougald and ~e 13 Carl Albert, congressman from 1

1 wanted ~0 study this we,~m:~~ ~ . . · year-old-son 1s played ·by Bill Me- Southeastern Oklahoma and House but Sam said to never study ex-

mom a bug floatmg arouna. Iver. The married daughter is I Majority Lead'er.' Entitled "Wrong I cept right before a test Ote else

Shallow Thinking? Ruth Young. Delores Walker reads

1

Decision" th'e · editorial rebuffed you will forget it all. You know, tlt.c J?_art of the stage manager. the u.s.' supreme :Cotirt's decillion , sometimes I think Sam is makillg

The final pre&entation, "The on apportionment. I fun of me. "'\ Sand-box" is an innovation in short Congressnui~ Al~rt has openly . ! stayed up ~ Righ~ last ~ght. ---- - -- - stated his opposition to the decision 1 I had a te~t th!~ mo~g I ~ss~

P f by the 'high court. He is supportin&' one ~uestlon , Who lB buned m The civil rights situation in the southern u. s. has Business ro e$SOr le·•islation that will counter the Grants Tomb ' I looked on Sam's

figured prominently in the recent news. ruiing. paper and he had Gogi Grant.

d · ~ .l • '1 · ht k · p) AJ k T In a public statement, he said, Mom, I think I'm getting home-Northern tu ents tram~ a CIVl ng s WOl' er s, are m ans as . an eur ''In my judgment, the decision of sick, after all I haven't been home the South aiding in voting registration and setting up cen- the S•preme court is in complete in 2 weeks. ~ te'rs for Negro children. Dr. Linnie Ruth Hall, head ol disregard of tlie language· of the · Please send $3.50 for shnbu~

Recently three of the e workers disappeared Their dis-~ Southeastern's business deP.art- Fourteenth. Amendment its~lf and lotioa. · · · · t 'll t th th t of the clear records of history." appearance has aroused nat:1cn~ l mterest. me.."l' W1 our e nor wes em "As a. matter of common senae," •1 Love,

. . . . S h I part of the United States includ- Alb t t · d "I espec'allv can- y C AnxiOus to obtam comments- and opm10ns fr01n eut - . . ' er con mue • 1 J our oo-ed . . . d d mg Alaska, dunng August. not understand why the court could eR tern students, the taff was highly dtsappomte an Ala.iika will be the 49th state she overturn any State apportionmett Sam says the Beetles are just a.

· embarra sed to find that they were either misinformed or has vis ited She has not beilll to !'-I?P~oved by its people through in- barber-shop quartet that didn't get weren't informed at all about the matter. . l ltlahve or referendum." waited on.

h t Vermont. The Southeastern editorial point-This we found hard to believe. This is a matter t a Dr. Hall and three companions I ed out that the ruling nullified a ------ )

will affect everyone in the future. Yet, most students are will l eave Durant July 3.1 and drive , P?~ula_r vote of the people, the only . . TWO , not' concerned. to Seattle Wash. touring points of ciyll nght guaranteed by the Con- I

Most sse students interviewed believe that the South- , ' I Stltution. · on the ~a.y: . Albert said that a state's app<~r- dy Epperson, Janet Thompson, and

ern situation was none of the civil rights workers' business. Tkere the~ will JOm a 12 d~y 1 tionment should be decided by the Lynda Jones, Atoka.

Thi so called "business" should not only be a concern of tour. They will go by bus to yvrute individual state. Susan Morgan, Vickie sue Keck, northern students, but a concern of all future adult citizens Horse, from there by tram to I He said, "The u.s. Supreme Deborah Ann McGee, Sandy Rae of the United States Ska.go._vay and then down the coast Court is the repository of judicial Moates, Carl Worsham, Craig

d. dl f t I d d' by shlp to Vancouver and back to I power. It is not the haven of every Gower, H . C. McGee, Randy If college stu ents, suppose Y u ure ea er s, IS- Seattle. 1 reform movement that is unable Bowles, and Cletus Ray Go~

play such shallow reasoning, what can we expect from the j They plan to return to Durant to attJact the attention of the peo- Temple; and Donna Slater, Sava.it~ J · general public? _. August 2:l. I pk." I nah.

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Page 3: DURANT, OKLA., THURSDAY, JULY 16,1964 Texoma· Music Camp ...carmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern... · -shot two "On e, we !8 of ~the play-lorna\ ' the year. ld be !rv&;ball

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.TBURSDA.Y, 'JULY 16, 1964 THE SOUTHEASTERN, Durtlllt, OlclGhoiiiiJ ----~------------------------------~---------

PAGE f'BBB6

*Hand~capped Child' a T rai~ing Problema Aired· At Workshop

By Jo Black t' The special education v/orkshop on the exceptional classroom child ~eld last week proved interesting to Southeastern students.

Robert Sul6van, Natha June SCott · Engagem-ent Told

Tuesday's discussions were cen­tered arourtd physical handicaps, I ce•·ebral_ palsy, and vocational re-I habilitation.

Leroy Taylor, director of special I education from the state depart­ment of education, discussed the -problem of special education for

Announcement of the engag~ ment of Natha June Lott to Robert Sullivan is being made· by her mother, Mrs. Juaneema L o t t , Battiest. Robert's father is Jess Sullivan, Pickeli.s .

The bride-elect will be a senior at Battiest High School next fall. She is attending the math insti­tute at Southeastern this 'SWIUiler.

· the phys~cally handicapped. ~ Taylor, stated that the child's chronological age, degree of ment­al retardation, and level of acad­emic achievement largely determ­ine the level at which he will be placed in the special education pro­gram. These programs are adapt­ed to the needs, interests, and fare of the child.

N atha is a member of the na­tional and state honor societies, and will serve as vice-president of the Future Homemakers of Amer• ica next ye.ar.

Harper Orth, administrative di-trector of the cerebral palsy cen- 1 ter at Norman, spoke on the causes . types, results, and treatment of

Robert is a 1962 graduate of Battiest High School where he let­tered four years in basketball. He was also a member of the state and national honor societies and salutatorian of his graduating class. He. is a senior English major at sse. cerebral palsy. _

0. th demonstrated models of furniture used in working with these children. Different aspects of the therapy program were shown by a film taken in the Norman elinic. " "The tragic thing about the situ­ation of the cerebral palsied child is that 75 per cent of the families end in either suicide or divorce," 1 says Orth. .

F r ed Hodges, vocational reha­bilitation counselor f o r Bryan county, led the discussion on voca­tional rehabilitction. All phases of the program were shown by slides depicting actual training pro­lgrams. Hodges emphasized the the importance of keeping the phy­sically handicapped working and productive citizens.

Taylor summarized the session with a thought about the three A's in dealing with handicapped chil­dren. These children suffer more fror.t the lack of these three A's

(~-acceptance, approval, and atfec­tion than from the actual handicap itself:

Ella Byrd Relnlon

,t Ella Byrd Reirdon To Wed Poe Brown

.Mrs. J ack J . Reirdon, Durant, is announcing the approaching mar­riage of her daug hter. Ella Byrd, to Poe Brown, son of Mr, and Mrs. ~oe J . Brown ar., Oklahoma City. Ella Byrd's father is the late Jack J. R eirdon.

The wedding will be August 1 in Durant.

Ella Byrd is a graduate of South­eastern. She is a member of Delta Zeta Sormi.t:~~: and served as presi­dent during h er senior year.

She returned from Indio, Oe.lif. t.his summer where she taught last ~ear.

She is a graduate student at Seutheastern this summer.

Poe formerly attended Oklahoma State University where he was af­filiated with Sigma Chi fraternity. He is now attending Southeastern majoring in elementary education. He plans to graduate in January. I Ella Byrd liis accepted a teach­lhX'' position in Sherman for the coming year,

''LOOK MOMMY! I'M IN THE MOVIES," says Carol Bentley, Durant sophomore, as she explores motion picture equipment. The crew of Phllllps-Marker Production of Dall8s was on .campu8 shootiug scenes for DEMON OF DEVILS LAKE. .

Movie Company Comes. To Campus ''Action" "Camera" ''Quiet on the set" . ''Wait for that truck to go by!" These have become familiar

sounds around the campus. The Phillip-Marker Production Com·­pany of Dallas is still trying to bring a touch of Hollywood to Du­rant. They arc shooting at Hickory Hollow, Lake Texoma, all over Du­rant and the Southeastern campus.

In order to keep up with the sch­edule ,it has been necessary to film scenes until 5 a.m. more than once. For the struggling students who are participating, it presents a handicap.

to Dr. A. E. Shearer, South~tern president, and the community for the cooperation he ... and his staff have received

If you think you want to be a movie star, go out on location and observe. There is no glamor nor parties on a hot dusty road or a sun-baked beach. The image fades

even more as the wee hours of the morning roll around ..

Toni Uselding, Durant student, when ~ked how she liked being a part of the film commented, "Well it's a lot of fun ex~ept John Mc­Cain and I have had to wear the same clothes five nights in a row and we ... : .... -".

''Tide Range _or· Topics Discussed ~t W'orkshop

By Jane Morrow . ··rdentifying the Gifted student".

Saylors-Maihbum To Exchange Vows

Mr. and Mrs. William A. Say­lors, Paris, Texas, announce the engagement of their daughter Nancy Virginia to Howard Mash­burn, Hugo. They plan to be mar­ried August 29 at the First Bap­tist Church in Paris. ·

N:ancy attended Paris Junior College and is employed in Dallas.

Howard will be graduated from Southeastern this summer and plans to attend law school at Ok­lahoma University this fall.

SSG Couple ·roBe Wed

The loe&l county sheriff's offfice has been used about 10 times: For scenes taking place outside the of­fice, the aged exterior of Russell school became the front ofa court house.

If you have ever been to the Pit in Dallas, take a gander at the back of the administration build­ing and see if it looks familiar. Can you imagine a bar in Dr. Donald Brown's office?

"I've :already obtained several Miss Elizabeth McKinney, eguca­good pointers and I'm very anxious tion professor, discussed providing to apply them to my ovyn stu- for ' the gifted in elementary dents," was the comment of Mrs. schools. ~s dis~ussing provisions , Flo Nelson and Elvin Sweeten Lucille Smith attending the wecial for the gJfted 1~ the secondary will be married July 31 in the education workshop held last week. ~ch9ols, the toplc· was broken home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Dr. Pat Powers, education pro- mto areas ~f stu~y. Dr. Ernest Marvin A. Nelson, Gene Autry. fessor, directed the workshop Sturch,. physiCal sclen_ce professor, Elvin's parents are Mr. and Mrs.

Leta Disheroon, John McCain, Sherry Gillham. an d Charles Young arc SSC &tudents who have parts in the full length horror movie.

Russ Marker, director, and for­mer Southeastern student said that they are over half through and plan to finish before the end of August. He expressed his gratitude

which included speakers from other covered rna~ and sclence. Berthel E. Sweeten, Lehigh. institutions in Oklahoma as well Miss Rq~ Hatchett, . ~nglish 1 Flo is a senior at Southeastern as southeastern professors. professor, discussed proViding for where she is a member of Sigma

th~ gifted in scco~dary F?nglish, Kappa ~orority: Mrs. Smith is the only particip- ana the area of soc1al studies was Elvin is a. spting graduate of

ant in the workshop who is pres- covered by Dr .. Louis Johnson, his- Southeastern where he was a ently a special education teacher. tory .pr.ofessor. member of the varsity basketball She teaches retarded children in the Denison schooJ system. The After each speaker concluded, a team for four years. He was af-1 etardations of Mrs. Smith's stu- group discussion was held among filiated with Blue Key, Who's Who dents include mongoloids, spastics, a ll workshop participants. il_l_American Colleges and Uniyer-cerebral p alsied children, brain· I stttes, and. Boule. . . da:ma<Yc and d af . I , They will make their home m

o • . e · . . Tishomingo where Elvin will teach Mrs. SfU.lth - feels that Speclal Emot·on I p bl a.nd coach basketball. Flo will con-

0 N E e~ucation is vital to public educa- I a ro ems tinue her studies here.

· twn. She says the students are The bride-elect w a s honored fice, will speak Friday. i"the ha~picst bunch of kids you·u .Are ttlack~s Topl·c . with a personal shower July 9 . in

Also on this week's program ever see becaase wh~ they are ~ the home of Nan Pittman, 101 w ere Dr. Charles Green, Lawton, ~a.ken out of ~e ordina.ey class- Magnilia. Assisting Nan as hos-d. irector of the Comanche County j ~ 00~ and grouped together cl~- "Social - Emotional Problems" tesses were Greta Slaton and Judy health department, Jane E. Chap- IS no pressure ~>n them. The;y can was the topic discussed at the Motley. _ man, professor of psychiatric nurs- progress at th~1r o~ rate w~thout Thursday session of the special I Those attending were Claudette ing of the OU School of Nursing, other. more mtelligent children education workshop by Katie Driever, Gloria Allen , Pat Hutton, and Lulline 4 We4s, New York laughmg at tllem. Frank Slack, Southeastern dean of Judy Coe. Murr Naylor, and Judy education speci8J.is~. The first major speaker for the women. Lockwood.

This week's cpRSUltants are· Edna workshop was LeRoy Taylor, di- . Before coming to Southeastern, Sending gifts were Linda Hulsey Haynes, clinical ~odal worker of rector of special education for the Miss Slack' taught children with and Anna Lee Milam. '!alih~na; Key Wolf, social worker state depa~~ent_ of educatic;m. ~e 1 serious emotional problems. She I m child welfare at Pawhuaka, and spoke on Spec1al Education m related h e r experiences wl'..ile Z~lla Darrow. child welfare speci- Oklahoma". I wqrking with these children to the ahst of tl\e Anadarko BIA office . Taylor spoke at a later date on classroom situation. ~

Group leaders are ~ow Proc- "Tile Physically Handic~pped". . Points of emphasis in the dis-tor, head o~ boys gwdance at the . Harper V. Orth, admirustratlve cussion were statistics about men­Seneca Indian _School; Dee ~reg- directo~ of t he cerebral palsy tal illneils· in children, recognizing ory, boys gwdance superv1sory center m N<;>r~ spoke on cere.ba! emotional problemg and signs of I teacher at Chilocco, and Mrs. Dar- palsy. A_ ~scuss1on of v<><:ational maladjustment, and techniques of row. r e h ab 111 tat i on was g1ben by helping disturbed persons.

Group recorders this week are Fred Hodges, vocational Jtehabili- · . . Lee Roy B a c on , supervisory tation co~selor in Durant. An .. explanatt.oa. of a SOC?Iogram t eacher at Carter A cademy, Ard- Mental retardati,on was discus- :r•~s g tvert. Its 1~portance m help­more, and Lemuel W. Apala, edu- sed by Joseph Deacon super- m~ to . ~staQl'ish mter-perB?nal re-

1 cational guidance specialist, llloc- intendent of the Pauls Valley State labonships was also explain~. · taw Agency, Philadelphia, Miss. school. Miss Katie Frank Slack, .. Tbe ~roup WR$_ ~ow;!' two fg.ms, I

Lectures, seminars, library ses- j sse dean of women, spoke on so- Emobons o;, Childr.ea. , and ~-sions, and group activities take up cial-amotiol'\8.1 pr~ble~. ger at Wor~ . The fi!ms .furth~ il-rnost of the time of the parti- Special education mclUdEJS the lustrated Miss Slack s discussion. I cipants but recreation is not over- gifted child as well as the ·~tard- 1

looked. ad child. Dr. M. K . ~ spoke on On the Th1U8day schedule, for

instance, is a dinner at Lake Tex- ! :--------------~ oma Lodge. I

TULSA, TULSA, ~A •

1 SANDWICHES THE NUGGET

in Tula&.

one of Southeastern's students was born at Tulsa, Oklahoma, went to Tulsa. High lichool and now llvee

1 Her name? Genelle '1'ulla. ----------------:~

Lee Nix Teaebers' Ageacy

Teachers, enr.U with us now berore -belt ,jobli are taken. Excellent positiens $4800, up. StlllQOls want t.o sign con­tracts now. 210 W . Ever­green, D_ur.ant, Okla. WA (­~668.

Page 4: DURANT, OKLA., THURSDAY, JULY 16,1964 Texoma· Music Camp ...carmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern... · -shot two "On e, we !8 of ~the play-lorna\ ' the year. ld be !rv&;ball

f'BB BOUI'BBABI'BRN, Dla-', OiWI ....

Beats Bryan To C&nch Title

~acuity Softball Team Wins Crown B•PeleMcGee

Bot weather ill one thin• that Oklahomans and Texans expect each summer. With this year no exception, the area has received another beat wave.

Local inhabitants find that air-conditft)ning is the only - means of survival. Think what it would be like to step from

a land of natural air conditioning to one like an oven and you have Jim Hays' situation.

The former Southeutem stu·._ ____________ _

dent union manager baa just re­turned from a teacblng ustgn­mcnt in Alaska &long witb hiJI wife Georgia and three chiJdrell.

Two years ago Jim and Georgia decided Alaska wu a good place to teach and there wu an opening

Elementar} llajora Study Muic•nship

Soutbeutenl'a faculty aom.ll BDroute to ita cb•mp.....,lp, team won ita aecond straJcht In· tm l'aculty t.m WOD two paau tramural title in Summer Leape Jut week. Tile l'aculty rdllalpld play Jlonday eventnc. Behind tbe Math D b7 a 12_. 8COI"e ud a 11-1 3-bit pltcbJ.Dg of Dr. Don Parlaam, bitting -.pree over the BaUer­the faculty team out-dlatuced makera. n~ rival Bryan County by a Bryan County, witb. a 6-1·1 2..0 .cote to chalk up a perfect 9-0 record ,bu an ln814e track tor the ~ record. MCODd place rung on the loop Jad.

Parham continued hla game win· der. 'lbe Bryan batamen mauled n1ng heroics by driving ln. one of eighth-placed BSU 19-2 Jut week. the two nma with a sharp llingle Htgb School Math InaUtute clinch­in the fourth inning. Dr. Emflllt ed third place with a 16-12 wln over Sturch drove ln. Parham with a the BoUermaken. double to complete acoring. McCurtain County tallied a '-3

Dr. Jolm Krattlger and Dr. Earl record for fourth place with two Kilpatrick each collected two hits wtna last week. The McCUrt:alu for the wlmllng Faculty team. tamed the Crazy Horaee 8-t and

pa.a.c. with '110 Uld •&o() ·~. Playen are Mlecttne an all«ar

team to be UIIIOUDCed later with the poalbWty of an all-atar pm~ developlq. Kembera of th18 t.ml · are Hlected by Individual player ballotlDC. f '

• INTB..UIUB.lL 8T ANDINGS

Teaa 'W L Faculty .......... . .... 9 0 Bryan .. .. ............. 4 1 HSMath .............. 6 2 McCurtain .. . . .. ... .. .. 4 3 Math t ... ... ...... .... s . . 3 Crazy Horses . . . . . . . . . . 3 4 Carter ..........•...... 8 6 BSU .................. 2 5· Math II . . .. . ..•...... . 1 5 Boilermakers . . . . . . . . . . 1 6

T 0 1 0 0 1 0 0

~' 0 in New Stuyahok. •

New Stuyahok is a .un&ll village in the southwest interior of the 50th state with a populatton of 170

Southeastern elementary educa­tion majors and minors are learn­ing that music studies continue in the summer.

Bryan County threatened to tie out-figured Kath I bya 6-2 maqtn. the score in the fifth ln.nlng with Bennie Kartln, a Bryan County no outa, runnen on tint and aec- batwellder. led the Summer Lea· ond, and a hard grounder hit to gi.te from the batter's box with a e Faculty fielder J. W. Loudennilk. s1ZZl1ng . 6 :S 0 average. DeDni8 TOP TEN mTTERS

Eskimos.

Nonna Wallace, Durant senior, reporta that her class visited the band room last week. Dr. George Conrey gave a demonstration of each of the instruments used in

An ucurate toas to third aacker Mitchell of the Crazy Honea bit Dr. Don Hazell resulted in a double an· even .600 average. Two faculty lNTBAMlJBAL-SOFTBALL play and closed out the Bryan members, Tommy Hedrk:k and Kll- (At leaat 15 at bats) Since there were no roads into

the area, the only way to it was by small plane or up the river, if there wasn't any ice.

high school bands. ,

threat. patrick earned third and fourth Player and Te&JD A. nrage Bennie MarUn, Bryan . . . . . . . . .660

SSC Alumnus Introduces 'Dennis Mitchell, Crazy Horses · .600~ Tommy Hedrick, ~ulty . . . . . . .680 Earl Kilpatrick, Faculty . . . . . . .500 David Brown, McCurtain ....... 470 Robert Worley, Bryan . . .. . . ... 438

Playing the piano has become a pa.rt of the daily routine accord­ing to the students. It is fun as well as helpful to learn how to build scales.

"We weren't worried about the remoteness of the village, but what we would find when we got there," Jim said. ' 'What we fOUDd was a modem three-room echool with a nice two bedroom home next door." For their semester project,

Jim and Georgia taught levels music students have been a.skoo to Unique Language Program

Ty Comstock. Bollennakers ... 390 Kenneth Manning, Bryan . . . . .3j0 CollJe Jame~HS Math ......... 376 Don Hazell, Faculty . . . . . . . . . . .364 ·

from t h e fourth through the compile a notebook in preparation Edwin Tijerina, graduate stu­eighth. Each grade waa on the ac- for teaching. The note ks are to dent from Monterrey, Mexico, has complishment system and all sub- contain lesson plans and teach- some interesting plans for next jects prescribed by the Ala8ka ing methods. year. Tijerina teaches Spanish in Board of Education were taught. 1 Cedar Vale, Kans., both in elemen-

Since neither of the Hays spoke tary and secondary school. the Eskimo language, ~was to Library" Increases His Cedar Vale program. which be the major problem. "Moat of our C consists of teaching 20 minutes a 5• students could apeak broken ataloguing Pace dc.y in all elementary classrooms, English. but couldn't carry on a and two classes in high school, is conversation in Engllah", Hays The end of another fiscal year called "Conversational Spanish". said. showed an increase in the number T};le Southeastern graduate plans

Though the summer months of books catalogued at the sse li- to introduce writing and reading reached comfortable temperatures brary. of Spanish in the fourth grade. Ti­in the 70s the winter montha posed According ....to Mrs. Mildred Wil- jerina believes that fourth ~rs some neV: problema, inclUding re- liams, asslataril librarian, there know English well enough to learn ceiving mail and suppUea. were 3005 books catalogued dur- a new language.

"In the winter, the mall plane I ing thiS fiscal year, 186 more tt.an . He feels that not only should the cam-e five days a week and landed in the previous year. The total fourth graders be able to read and on the frozen river " Jim stated. number of books catalogued in the write Spanish bythe time they en­"In spring when the river Ia break- sse library is 75,846. ter high school but also should be ing up we got flights only three In add!tion to having scores of able to think in Spanish. days per week." new books for reference and aids Tijerina plans to divide the pro-

With the river frozen 10lid the in studying, the summer students gram into 12 years, starting with supply barge is stopped 80 ' dog have found the library a cool" teams are used to bring tile neces. "hide-a-wa~" from the hC?t sun sities. The dogs are an interesting when burymg themselves m lea-part of Eskimo life becauae they I sons. arc essential.

Because the dogs work bard and CALIFORNIA EDUCATOR are then chained up, it la I;ittle RETURNS FOB VISIT

Advisers Confused About Enrolment

Some of Southeastern's instruc- I tors are as confused about enrol­ment as the students are. wonder that they become victous.

''This becomes evident when one gets loose and bites someone", Jim said.

"Eskimo children are also very mischievious and tease the dogs when they're chained, ao this makes it even worse," he added.

Though there was no television, Hays said they quickly learned to live without it. "We did have a good transoceanic radio and many times we picked up San Francisco, or Moscow."

The educational values for them­selves and the children are Jim and Georgia's most prized poeaessions

Dr. Joe Apple, Southeastern Dr. Dave Stevens apparently alumnus with a national reputa- forgot that July 10 was pre-enrol­tion in education, visited South- ment day and had to be located by eastern and his home town last school administrators while his ad­week. visees lined the hall outside his of-

Apple is now at San Diego State fice. College in Calofornia where his Miss Minnie Baker's students present assignment includes direc- also found their adviser missing. tion of one of the masters degree I She had previously arranged a programs. Earlier he was at Ball visit to the dentist's office for Fri­State Teachers College in Indiana. day afternoon.

In addition to attending South- The lost advisers were finally eastern as a · student, Apple also located and enrolment got under taught English at Russell while it way as usual. was the college's laboratory school. -------

The California educator was SOUTHEASTERN ALUMNUS I

the first grade and continuing through high schooL

The Spanish teacher graduated in 1961 with a secondary major from Southeastern. He credits :Miaa Amy Robinson, former Oklahoma Presbyterian. Center president, for his coming to Southeastern.

One of the major problema fac­ing public school teachers in the past few years baa been how to evaluate the student's progress.

Tijerina is8ues no report carda. He writes a letter every six weeks to the parents, explaining the ma­terial covered.

He invites the parents to Visit the classroom and support the pro­gram. And lasUy, of course, one of the most important goals in a fo~ eign language class is to work to­ward a better international under­standing'.

Baptist Group Enjoys Ice Cream Social

Baptist Student Uriion members recently enjoyed an informal ice cream pa.rty. Irma Johnson and Hugh Pool directed the social hour.

Walter Buice, music and educa­tion director at Calvary Baptist Church and Andy Anderson, also from Calvary, furnished entertain­ment.

The group enjoyed games direct­ed by Ola Faye Diggs and Gwen Ervin.

Campus In Midst ' Of Pre-Earolmeat

Pre-enrolment for the fall term got under way last Friday when students from Choctaw, McCur­tain, Pushmataha, and Oklahoma­at-large signed for class~.

Friday, July 17, residents of Bry­an County and out of state stu--' denta can enrol. Anyone scheduled to pre-enrol July 10 can also enrol Friday.

The last day for pre-enrolment will be Friday, July 24 when stu­dents from Atoka, Carter, La­timer, LeFlore, · Love, Marshall, Mcintosh, and Pittsburg counties enrol. J

.AJly student scheduled to pre­enrol on either previous date may do so on July 24.

July 24 is also the last . day be­ginning freshmen and transfer stu­dent;s can enrol.

Regular enrolment for fall \vill begin Tuesday, September 8.

STUDENTS EXHIBIT SUMMERWOBK

Student art work is now on dis­play in the fine arts building. Faculty and students are invited to Visit the exhibit and see re­sults of summer work in the art department.

from Alaska. The earthquake was an added

experience which did UtUe damage to New Stuyahok but was quite evident when the family returned

also a Southeastern tennis champi- WILL TOUR RUSSIA on and one of his motives in visit- SouthellStern graduate Dr. Nath-~ ing the campus was to resume an Brooks will tour Russia this tennis matches w i t h Clarence summer along with 24 other col-l:>yer, college coach. lege and university professors. O'RILEY'S RESTAURANT

home through Anchorage. Apple's daughter, also a tennis Dr. Brooks is a geography pro-This past winter waa hard for

southern Alaska. The temperature rarely gets below -20 but Wa year it reach -40. This caused the river to stay frozen longer than usual and the Hays family bad to go out

champion,- is entering summer fes.sor at Northeastern State Col­tournament play in the midwest, lege. He received his B.A. degree including Chicago. from Southeastern and his mas-1

by sled team. It took eleven dogs to remove

all the belongings. "Tbia was an­other experience because the next day we were on a jet", Jim 8&ld. "It pointed out that Aluka Ia a land of comparison ad contrast, old and new. Someday soon we hope to return for a vlalt."

BACK FISOM HAWA.D S&mmye Kay Roundtr:ee, South­

eastern alumna, vlaited the camp­us this week. She recently return­ed from a tour of the Hawalian lalands which she said was "won-derful". j

She will be at home in Hugo for two weeks before she returns to California, where she ~hes first grade.

Flat-f'op B~ lor f'exomaland

-Ia-

JOHN if !LLEY'S NORDI BARBER SHOP

ter's and doctor's degrees from the Unlvensity of Oklahoma.

Travel in Russia will be by rail, motor coach and air with special tours ·by boat on the Black Sea and the Don River.

The group, composed of geo­graphy professon from the United States and Canada, will tour min­ing areas, industrial plants, col­lective and state tanns, forest areas and recreaUonal areas.

RETURNS FROM 'WORLD'S FAIR

Elaine Schuster, economics in­structor, baa returned from the east and a trip to the World's Fair, and visited the campus Monday. She reporta that it was a wonder­"ful trip.

-------ENBO~ TO ALASKA

Louis Holderby

New and Used Cars Sales-Service-Satisfaction

Plleae\VA4•S887 Open 8 a. m. to 6 :80 p. m. Tueeday throuah Saturday 1115 N. Sixth Phone WA 4-2185

Floyd and Ann Hayes were on campus laat week. They are on their way to Ft. Wainwright, Fair­banks, Alaska, where Floyd wUl be flying Turbo-Jet Hellcopten and

o~ MulU~e ~L Floyd II!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~ Ia a •eo graduate of Southeutem. .:

men vi4ed lfltlaic aembl gradu

Org Brans ''Marl

.. The Raym

One e&steli degreE convO< maste.J arc bs

DoroU Josepll more, han on, Buckm Shirl e) Dollar I

Willl Dougl~ Shennl W4}iac Blancb

Rayti HamesJ low, St erson, : n:ngs, son.

Juanl Jesse • Ildhnetl ary, Nq

Johru Larry, thews, Munn,

Philli Dewey George mon, Pqmer, Jame~

Rowan, Scott, J Betty 1

Stev Vella

Robert Plano V Kennetll

Lewis Jotm WI Udlns, 1