leaving to do christian· counselingcarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/the...

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' . I I l ' - 1915 Darut, OtJaa•• '14701 Changes ing ' Eng ish o· epartment To Expand Southeastern's J&rtment bas. courses for the .Amoog tbe Ust of tbe new offered as well as discrlp- tiOil of each one, to be posted outside the EngUsh amce. Most of tbe posltioo courses now ' approach to ltS Eaett-instructor bas .1 Tbe IJR)er level \ also cbanieQ to dent wbo is ....... subject matter to \ Among the upper , ses wbich are open , dents interested are to be taugbt by Dr. Fr"'"" and one to be taught by Dr. Hlll. Dr. Freed's are 1 Fundamentals of , n, .., .! a course aptly Satire. Of the Utera- ' ture class, Dr. ments. ' "The wltb· tbe w.rioos and a•lyze ' backgromxt ln ls _ re- I qulred. Stwieots wW be asked · to read a a story, a play, and a noveL" , Each of these I be discussed wltb 1 trylog to I Jmow about a ary work. Ablslc lng tbe various also be read. The Satire is ex- plained by Dr. Freed as, ''Sa- tire is simply tbe art of poking fun. In this class we will cuss bow and why people laugh at tbe world and the people who tnbablt it." Among tbe authors r n d will be Mark Twain, George Orwell. Jules Felffer, Cbaucer, Sinclair Lewis, Wil- liam Shakespeare, and Art Buchwald. ' Freed goes 011 to say, "All ol tbe works read emlblt tbe Yltal spark and tbe lu•mor wbich are essential to tbe enjoymeot of successful satire. Tbe course Is intended to a1111 ea 1 to noo- Eogllsb as well as EngUsb ma- jors, but does not require a previous study of Uterature.'' Dr. HUI expressed b1s views · of b1s course as, "One de- slped to be of interest totbose students, ·wbtle not Engllsb ma- jors or minors, who delight in reading for pleasure. We wm read aniDnberofsbortandsome looger novels of tbe best erea.- tors of flctioo from all over the world in the last century." · Hill coatimes, "Class for- mat wl11 coasist ol focusing oa 'ftrtous aspects ol fictiooleldlng to wttatmakes a great noveL" There wW be ooe or two essay eums and aoe out-ol-eJass JRper • Students are urged' to drop · by the Engllsb desarbnent aDd find bow literature can be an enjoyable experience. largest Cast In· History To Present ''Mary Poppins'' .,/ Tbis year's annual Cblld- Tickets for all performances reo's TbeaterSbowissebedUled go on sale in tbeSpeech and to open July 20, according to Communicatioos offlceMonday, Doris Simpson, in charge of tbe July 14, and can be reserved. play production. Tbe admlssloo is 1LOO fer Ninety-m children, per- adults and $.50 for ebUctren. baps tbe largest cast in tbe Tbose cootributing to tbe event's history, wW appear on pliy produetioo, costume de- stage during tbe performaoce. signing. and set CODStruetioo This year's preseotatloo Is are: Rodney Avant, J01oBater, Walt Disney's verslooof''Mary David .Benn, Joyce Banoett and Popplns". . Shirley Bird. Tbe play wUl open with a Sharon Castleberry, Betty Sunday matillee, July 20, at 2:30 Kathy Hayes, Shelly wbich will be followed by two Hea.tb and IaCbrica Jones. evening perfwmances; MoDday Lynnette Kirk, Gayleae Lllly, · and Tuesday evening at '7:30. Elaine Maddox, Larcy Miears, Tbe production will be beld in Debbie Moran, Judy Qlalls, tbe Little Theater of the Fine T. D. Miller, and Debbie West- Arts Building. brook. • \ W.AL'I' DISMEY"S reseoted · July PORJRS" wU1 be lD the Little Tbalef. MlaetJ-slx chM• en will appm- 1D the an- ..-1 Child a eD'& Tbater Sbow. ' . . ' DR. BU.L GU . LHAM Wll..L BE' leaYlog for Springfield, Mo., to begin " Work as . a Cbrlstla.n lor.. Be bas taught at for _ six years, but is bappy about bis '-new position. Leaving To Do Christian· Counseling Dr. Bill GIUtwm, assoe1ate professor of psychology, will be leaYlog Soatbeastern at tbe eDd of tbls StDDmer session. Dr. GUJhllm Ills taught at Soatbea.stern tbe past six years. He received b1s BA at Nortbel.stero, b1s MA at Okla- boma University. He aJso com- pleted work on b1s doctorate at OSU. Dr. Gll1ta n\,ls leaylng to do Christian at field, Mo. Tb1s tan be. wW be with group ol Cbrlstlan psychologists. For tbe sast few years, Dr. GIDtwm lias been doing wcn- selfng in b1s time. He feels DOW be sbauld fully de- tote himself to tills area. Since the job bas- DO steadv illeome, be will not charge for bis services, be &afS b1s "sus- .tenaoce will be from God." GU- 'nwm says bls ttmUy--ts bam about tbe decisioo, and are very entbusJastic about tbe work. . Altbougb Dr. GDJbam enjoys teaching much, and bates to leave Southeastern, be feels positive and happy about · tbe wort be wl11 be doing. Everyone is invited . . . Watermelon · feed and Dance A 1oac time SfWbol 01 S*'*"- mer will be :m· g& at sQ!Ply tMs evemng tn tbe Ylclrdty of . tbe. ampbltlater •. Tbe · stu- · deat Ml!lte Js spoasoring the •o-1 w;aterme.\oo feast at this time 1nd best yet. tbere will be DO cbafce. · , , ThiS wl11 protably be tbe last eblnee for everyooe to. getber before ftml eums and eDd of sebool, so ls urged to . atteod both events. . ' ater in the Neftda Brothers · w111 be entertaining at tbe seCCIIId street dl,llee of the samJDer · in froat d the Stu- cleatUnioo. Tbe · alllkllt aM au- Dary senlees, wltb . tbe belp . or Jerry . Williams bas pat a lot of effort !Mo this a good time Jor all,so came Old anct let Jwlr clown.

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Page 1: Leaving To Do Christian· Counselingcarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern/Newspapers/197… · I l I ==:.=~;:..~-~-----..::JUIJ:· ~JS 1915 Darut, OtJaa•• '14701 Changes

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-==:.=~;:..~-~----------..::JUIJ:· ~JS 1915 Darut, OtJaa•• '14701

Changes ing '

Eng ish o·epartment To Expand Southeastern's

J&rtment bas. courses for the .Amoog tbe Ust of tbe new offered as well as discrlp­tiOil of each one, to be posted outside the EngUsh amce.

Most of tbe posltioo courses now

' approach to ltS Eaett-instructor bas

.1 Tbe IJR)er level \ also cbanieQ to

dent wbo is ....... subject matter to

\ Among the upper , ses wbich are open , dents interested are

to be taugbt by Dr. Fr"'"" and one to be taught by Dr. Hlll.

Dr. Freed's are 1 Fundamentals of Lib~~ ,n, .. ,

.! a course aptly Satire.

Of the Utera-' ture class, Dr.

ments. ' "The wltb· tbe w.rioos and a•lyze ' backgromxt ln ls _re-

I qulred. Stwieots wW be asked · to read a poem~ a story,

a play, and a noveL"

, Each of these I be discussed wltb 1 trylog to

I Jmow about a ary work. Ablslc lng tbe various also be read.

The Satire is ex-

plained by Dr. Freed as, ''Sa­tire is simply tbe art of poking fun. In this class we will ~­cuss bow and why people laugh at tbe world and the people who tnbablt it." Among tbe authors r n d will be Mark Twain, George Orwell. Jules Felffer, Cbaucer, Sinclair Lewis, Wil­liam Shakespeare, and Art Buchwald. '

Freed goes 011 to say, "All ol tbe works read emlblt tbe Yltal spark and tbe lu•mor wbich are essential to tbe enjoymeot of successful satire. Tbe course Is intended to a1111 ea 1 to noo­Eogllsb as well as EngUsb ma­jors, but does not require a previous study of Uterature.''

Dr. HUI expressed b1s views · of b1s course as, "One de­slped to be of interest totbose students, ·wbtle not Engllsb ma­jors or minors, who delight in reading for pleasure. We wm read aniDnberofsbortandsome looger novels of tbe best erea.­tors of flctioo from all over the world in the last century." · Hill coatimes, "Class for­mat wl11 coasist ol focusing oa 'ftrtous aspects ol fictiooleldlng to wttatmakes a great noveL" There wW be ooe or two essay eums and aoe out-ol-eJass JRper •

Students are urged' to drop · by the Engllsb desarbnent aDd find bow literature can be an enjoyable experience.

largest Cast In· History To •

Present ''Mary Poppins'' .,/

Tbis year's annual Cblld- Tickets for all performances reo's TbeaterSbowissebedUled go on sale in tbeSpeech and to open July 20, according to Communicatioos offlceMonday, Doris Simpson, in charge of tbe July 14, and can be reserved. play production. Tbe admlssloo is 1LOO fer

Ninety-m children, per- adults and $.50 for ebUctren. baps tbe largest cast in tbe Tbose cootributing to tbe event's history, wW appear on pliy produetioo, costume de-stage during tbe performaoce. signing. and set CODStruetioo This year's preseotatloo Is are: Rodney Avant, J01oBater, Walt Disney's verslooof''Mary David .Benn, Joyce Banoett and Popplns". . Shirley Bird.

Tbe play wUl open with a Sharon Castleberry, Betty Sunday matillee, July 20, at 2:30 Dun~n. Kathy Hayes, Shelly wbich will be followed by two Hea.tb and IaCbrica Jones. evening perfwmances; MoDday Lynnette Kirk, Gayleae Lllly,

·and Tuesday evening at '7:30. Elaine Maddox, Larcy Miears, Tbe production will be beld in Debbie Moran, Judy Qlalls, tbe Little Theater of the Fine T. D. Miller, and Debbie West-Arts Building. brook.

• \W.AL'I' DISMEY"S reseoted ·July

PORJRS" wU1 be lD the Little Tbalef.

MlaetJ-slx chM• en will appm- 1D the an­..-1 Child a eD'& Tbater Sbow.

• '

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' •

DR. BU.L GU.LHAM Wll..L BE' leaYlog for Springfield, Mo., to begin "Work as . a Cbrlstla.n · conn~ lor.. Be bas taught at ~ll for _six years, but is bappy about bis'-new position.

Gillharr~ Leaving To Do Christian· Counseling

Dr. Bill GIUtwm, assoe1ate professor of psychology, will be leaYlog Soatbeastern at tbe eDd of tbls StDDmer session.

Dr. GUJhllm Ills taught at Soatbea.stern fo~ tbe past six years. He received b1s BA at Nortbel.stero, b1s MA at Okla­boma University. He aJso com­pleted work on b1s doctorate at OSU.

Dr. Gll1tan\,ls leaylng to do Christian e~ at ~ring­field, Mo. Tb1s tan be. wW be ~rting with a· group ol Cbrlstlan psychologists.

For tbe sast few years, Dr. GIDtwm lias been doing wcn­selfng in b1s ~re time. He feels DOW be sbauld fully de­tote himself to tills area.

Since the job bas-DO steadv illeome, be will not charge for bis services, be &afS b1s "sus­. tenaoce will be from God." GU­'nwm says bls ttmUy--ts bam about tbe decisioo, and are very entbusJastic about tbe work.

.

Altbougb Dr. GDJbam enjoys teaching much, and bates to leave Southeastern, be feels positive and happy about · tbe wort be wl11 be doing.

Everyone is invited . . .

Watermelon ·feed and Dance A 1oac time SfWbol 01 S*'*"­

mer will be :m· g& at sQ!Ply tMs evemng tn tbe Ylclrdty of. tbe. ampbltlater • . Tbe · stu-

·deat Ml!lte Js spoasoring the •o-1 w;aterme.\oo feast at this time 1nd best yet. tbere will be DO cbafce. · , , •

ThiS wl11 protably be tbe last eblnee for everyooe to. get~· getber before ftml eums and eDd of sebool, so ~veryone ls urged to . atteod both events.

. '

ater in the e~nlng Neftda Brothers ·w111 be entertaining at tbe seCCIIId street dl,llee of the samJDer ·in froat d the Stu­cleatUnioo.

Tbe · alllkllt aM au-Dary senlees, wltb . tbe belp. or Jerry . Williams bas pat a

lot of effort !Mo math~ this a good time Jor all,so came Old anct let Jwlr clown.

Page 2: Leaving To Do Christian· Counselingcarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern/Newspapers/197… · I l I ==:.=~;:..~-~-----..::JUIJ:· ~JS 1915 Darut, OtJaa•• '14701 Changes

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-Student$ Urged To Voice Opinions In letter For,;,

( . . ~· .. rtK'4Dt)J · to wrtte-.n edltodal.

He urgq u.-Staiteat i!Se•te to lake acttoa toward repalrlag --arnqgem• at tbe softball fteld on campts.

Aa edl~ by deflniHOO. is an aplnloo of tbe editor or tbe • • I

oewSIApe~ •tr. As we ue DOt tamlllar wWl tbe sltuatiOD at tbe sol'tblll field,. we woold aot be able to express an 1oplnloo for any acUca ~be taw 1

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. Tbe ~ttwe:ra. ~ eoougb, is to be used as a voice of the stuc:leat & YU, as eJpressed in an earller editorial, any studeDt wlsblng t-o YOice an opinion is urged to write a letter to tbe edltol'.. _ I ·

4ll ~rs to tbe ejdftor will be published. u signed, and brought to ~. tbe New~r office in tbe lasement , of Morrison Han. . .. . • 1

May· we ,add tbat U acJdlticnl prodding' need by given; studleot Senate meatl~ ue beid Monday's at 1:00 p.m. in tbe Presi­dent's Coafereoce ro 1 n 011 tbe secood Door of tbe AdullntstraUCil bldl.,.ng. If . tbe · .newsraper is to be, trnly ;· a •• student ~WSJRper"-- tbea tbere must be ~cipttion by the ·students.

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WI1H .,.,, •

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...................................................... ldt=wr,r ~~~ It~ lt~.~ ... ~ ... ~ ............................ JtiiLJ1r IIILIIII

.................................................. .JlCII ~~~~~ E411tor .............. ; ........................ .JI0rma, ~ •••cer ••• ............... ~ ....................... Carla \Kelll• .. cer .... ..:. .. - ............................... .1"""' llartla

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PrOduitlaa Crew~····--·-·-·• .. ••• ............ ~.-·.Johnna Sbepberd I aad ADD Morris

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Manley aDd Lela Lyoas

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Smile

rr'S AMAZING bow Uttle our parents mew about childhood psyebology, yet bow great we. turned out.

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Awhile

ONLY SOUE of us can learn by otber people'smlstakes. Tbe rest of us laq to be tbe otber ' people.

MY WIFE went Oil a hiM-' oa aDd coee$ut dlet; sbe dldD"t

lose any weight bat you sboU1d see ber cUm~ trees.

Dr. Bailey,SSU ·G-rad •

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Now German Professor Former . student. Moille. bach oo Tuesday nights she~

Bailey, las gone a loag •Y teach ''Educatlcnl Soeiologj.'' since belng graduated in 1963. AU classes meet from 6:3<Jto

. Sbe is aow teacblag in Germany J~20 p.m. . . in CODDeCtion with an Airforce Darblg tbe smnmer quarter Prop-am. she taught tbese courses 'at ·

Dr. Bailey, a Ball Slate Un- Wiesbaden and·Sembach bases. iversity professor, wlll remain Particularly equipped to in Germany durlng tbeautwma teach about multl-eultural aDd cp.rter, Sept. 8 - Nov. M, to multi-etbDlc educatim. most .of continue teaehi~ at Air Dr. Batley's pablle scbdol F~rce bases in Wlesbaden, teacblng experience was ·in New Seinbach aDd Rbeln-Maln. Me:dco wbere ber students were

Her .courses are Plrt of tbe Meslcan-Amerlcan, American Ball Slate/~ir Force-sponsor- IDdJan, black aDd wblte. : ed master of arts degree in Dr. Bailey earned berbacti-edncation_ requirements. elor's aDd master's degrees at

At Rbeln-Main on Monday . Southeastern, aDd ber P.b.D. at nights aDd at Wiesblden oo tbe UDiYerslty of New Meslc;o Thursday nights sbe wlll be at Albuquerque 'Wbere sbe also teacbing "Multl~ultral and •s a member of tbe faculty. MulU-Ethnlc Educatim 1Ji Sbe is a oative ol McAlester, American Schools." At Sem-· Okla •

One· Act Plays Are Presented

By Drama Dept SOSU Drama ' Dedartment

•uumer DlreeU.C Cllss. wlll present a series of ooe ac­plays, July ' ZSrd, aDd Z4tb. Tbere ~ be afterDoOil aDd eftnl. perfOI'IQUCIS. Tbe pUbUc 18 laYit.d. b ae ol clarge.

1'be plaJS to be presented by tbe ellss lnclude: '•Knpp's test Tapes", dlracted bJ Zara McCutcbeoo;. Momy BeadrU, · dlrectln« "Pen of Mv Aunt": Cyathll · Wbitebllrst, dlreet1Dg Nell Simm's Suite, Act m"; Ruth Love directing "Tbe

\ More tbe Merrier". by Stan­ley Kortman; Ruth Eakle, Tbor­ton Wilder's "TbeLoagCbrist­mas Dinner."

Faye GoU,rd, directlng George Bernard Slaw's "How be Ued to tbe Husllllld"· Lewis . , Cblndler, Nell Simoo's Plna Suite, Act D; Denise Hawkins. "Funny Girl", Sv•n Hutctdns. "Tbls Property is Coodemned" aDd BID Catron, "Krapp's Iast Tapes", by Samuel Becke"-

Ciarles Wartben, in clarge of tbe productions, says tbeyare all going very trell, aDd will be well worth seelng.

Times wlll be anoonncedfor acutal performances at a later date.

Sturch Re-Elected As Kiwani Trustee Ernest Sturcb, Jr •• vlee~

president of SoutbeasternOkla­Juua Slate University, Durant, Oklahoma, ,.as · el81!ted to a S8CCIDd two-year term as a trustee of Ki•nis lnteruatl()llll at tlat 60th an-111111 convention in Atlanta_ June 25.

As a trustee, Sturch wlll continue to sene as a member of tbe govern­Ing body. Tbe Ktwanls Jnter­•Ucnl Board of· Trustees re- ~ presents Kiwanis' 280,000 · members in 6700 clubs in 47 eoantires. Storch 'Will begin bls secoDd term October L

Prior to bls election to tbe Klwnls lnteroattooal Board of Trustees. S~hservedas pre­sident of tbe Kiwanis Club of Durant, Ueute•nt governqr aDd goveroor of tbe Teus..Ot.Ja­bome Kiwants District. He las also served as cblrlman of the Kiwanis lnteroational Commit­tee oo Membership Growth IDd Education. ·

He cur-rently served a5 cbairman of tbe {{lwarils lnter­natlooal Board Committee on~ Leadership and Council, and is

.a member of the board com­mittees on comventim. •lid membership growth and ecmca -=t tiCil. Sturch las been a Kt!.r wanlan for 18_ years. 1

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Sturcb is a member of tbe North Central Assoeiatioa .of Academic Administrators, tbe Okba~oma Education Assoela­tiCil, the Am§!rlcan Chemical Soelety, and tbe Research SilL ciety of America. He Is a ~&st member of the Slate Board of EumiDers in -tbe Basic Sci­ences, and tbe American Asso­ciation of Physics Teachers. He is also a member of tbe

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·State Regents Committee oo Pllnnlnc for tbe SeftDties. ,

Active in civic· and socllll . ' wort. be 1s a member of tb'e

. Duanl c•mber of Commerce.. OtJabclma Heritage Soclet;, and _Is a put city etwlnnu of tbe March ol Dimes and tbe Assoe•uoa. He 18

a .. lllst eacatlve committee member of tbe Durant Ceatea­ntal Celebratioa. He Is Ustr.i in "Who's Wbo in Amerka," (1971) "Oatsti.Jidlac Educators of America." ·lad "AmericaD

eDof .. Sturch alld b1s wife, Kathy,

laft three sms • • .

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! DR. ERNEST SU'URCH

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Page 3: Leaving To Do Christian· Counselingcarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern/Newspapers/197… · I l I ==:.=~;:..~-~-----..::JUIJ:· ~JS 1915 Darut, OtJaa•• '14701 Changes

rtment &,will • ac­t 14th. a and

Tbe large. seated .npp•s ,Zara tDdrb, ' l.ant": recttng e, Act · ''Tbe ' stan-Thor­brlst-

eettog "How Lewis Plaza rkfns, cMns, nned" ; I•st ckett. · large tyare l w1ll

tdfor Jater

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ltte.e tea­steel :a," tors l.c:an

thy,

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• -GROWING TREND in Uldversfties and colleges ar-

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co.mtry is to bold up tbe landscap~ and layt.og of .,. 1

untll the students bave chosen the ~&tbs to be most traveled. Students at Southeastern bave cbosen

their it seems, yet are now being prohibited fr001 do-ing so signs posted to ward off offeoders.

Edu ational Grants Aid •

Col ye Bound Students

wbare year to tlC!Dil

EJJgiblUty" adernic awtJable coU.es.

~ ellcfble lnclade DOt only

andanlftr-'fOCI. tiona I, tech­

scbools, aDd of ·aursillg.

for a ~sic Grant ftrst CCliDplete

"AppllcaUoo for of Baste Grant tbe 1975-76 ac-

Tbese forms are high SChoo~

or by

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writing Basic G~ts. P.o. Box 84, Wasblngtm, D.C. 20044.

Within four to six weeks tbe applicant will receive a "stu­dent EUgiblllty Report", wblch tells 'Wbetber tbe student las c:p Ufted. Wbeo tbe report is re­ceived, It must be 51Dnltted to the fl•nclal aid officer at the

. scbool In wblch tbe student Is interested in enrolling. Tbe tlrwnelal aid omcer wll1 tbeo calculate tbe amount of tbe Basic Grant aw.rd.

A Basic Grant may not · cOYer more ttan one-lalf of tbe totll cost of educatiOil. Tbls Includes tultioo, fees, room aM board, boots, supplies, and miscellaneous expeMes.

IJBRARY HOURS FOR SUM­MER are Monday through Tb­ursclly, 7:50 am to 8:50 p.m.

Friday, 7:50 a.m to 3:50 p.m.

1'be library is closed Sat­urday and Snoctay.

LOST: Wblte-gold ladies watch. Bracelet type Waltham. Please call 924-5024 if you lave seen tbls watch.

• • ' •

-July 15, 1975 THE SOUTHF.A$'l"ERN Durant, Okllbolna Pap 3 •

Industrial Ed. Future looks Bright ,

Soatbeutern plaM for ex-paNdco, and oae area sooa to be eiiJiadilld Is tbe area of lndas­trlal Education.

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Accordlnc to Dr. AlYiD Wh­Ite, Director of tbe DiYtsiOD of IDdustry, this process of •xpanstOD will tate place in three ptwses. "As it loots DOW," Wbtte stated, "ptii.H l• Win start some time after Ju(y 17. Tlds Is the date bldswlllbe submitted by contractor$ for constructloo of a oew facility."

Ptase 1 Involves tbe COil­structlon of a building to bouse tbe metals and electroalcs de­lllrtments. "Tbls building of about 20,000 sq. feet will be of modular coastructiOD, withpeb­ble lift up slab walls." Wblte e:zpJalned. Location wll1 be just west of tbe chi Jd care cen­ter oo Cbuctwa.

Tbe price tag oo tbe new equipment is about 100,000. We • lave orderedsomenewmacbln-ery to be lnlsed in the proposed building. These macbloes are for use in framing and sbaplng of metals," be said. · "A few of tbe machines bave already arrived and some won't be ready for a.bwt eight mootbs." Phase 1 is scheduled for completiOD some time before the second semester tbls year.

Wben asked about reasOils for such an expaosioo as tbls, Wbite stated tlat tbe old faclU­ty was Inadequate because of its sl:re. Also, some of tbe new electrOilic equiJment re­quires temperature aDd bnmid­lty cootroled environments, Jrb­lch tbe present facility doesn't ' lave.

"Tbe field is growing so rapidly tlat we need tbls ex­~Bnst~ aDd new machinery to

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belp in our four-year tecboi­cal de(ree offered by this uni­versity. We even graduated oar first female in tbe field of drafting aDd design tbe spr­ing of 71. Sbe now las a job in Denver as an eoctneer," Wblte added.

"I gef calls all tbe time for people oeedlng someooe for jotl6 as supervisors, manaprs aDd euglneers," be revealed, "A lot of teaching positic.s are ftl1ed, but in' tbe area oflnctust-

(COil't to pg. 4)

Miller Manages By Day . And Teaches At Night

Plant manager l'Y day, col­lege ·instructor at nigiL This mav sound a little ~ but as. Lloyd Miller, manager of Du­rant Electronics, stated, ''it's very fulfilling." · Mlller finished bls tblrd semester at Soutbelstern as an instructor In tbe field ·or Bust­oess Admlntsb:atiOil this spring. Tbls was b1s first teacblnc posit! Oil.

Being · graduated from Kent State with a Bachelor's · in Science AdmlnlsbatiOD, Miller also las worked as an lndustral Engineer, Mill MaJager, and

_ lndustral Deve~eat Special 1st wttb Tbe Bureau of Jndlln Aatrs. Be1ac' ln tbe present pos1Uoo. of maMger&Ddeeoeral ID&JiaP.l'. be ~ able to dra .. upoa this as well as ~ ex­periences to . brlog eurreat business practices into tbe classroOOI. ·

A native_ of Cblcago, Mlller moved to Durant upoa accept­ing tbe general manager posl-• tioo of Durant -E lectronlcs Inc. in 1965.

NOt limiting bis talents to tbe grOUDd, Mlller also las a great interest in Dying. A pre­World WarD Dyer, be tasoTer 10,000 hours Dying eq~~edeoce.

He is a member of Tbe Amer-. lean Bolaua Society, Aircraft Owoers and Ptlots AssocD.ttm and is an booorary member of Alpba Eta Rbo, tbe professiOil­al Allatioo fraternity at South­eastern.

As an Instructor, Miller stated tbat be was pleasantly surprised at tbe awareness aDd reasoning ability of tbeaverage college student •

Mating b1s classes more future orientated, tbe class toot business related field trips to e:zplore tbe persoanel policies of such firms as Teas Instru­ments, Peabody c..Ouoo, aDd Durant E lectrODics. Guest lectures of various area com­IJlDies and uniOD bns1P8S$

.ageats also belped to clarify the policies aDd practices to today~s business orgaoiDtiODS.

Wben asked about actrice to studems interested in a basi- ; ness career, Killer replied tbat bis advice is to take as mueb accounting as possible, .. be­cause later you'll fiDd it very belpful". With refereacetooen semester, Miller r-eplied, ''I enjoy teacblng and am already makhJC plaru; to teach a cllss In some form of business this fall".

IMPERIAL · BARBERS .

Gals & Guys -

• Sebring Shags •

1514 No. 1st 924-2395

• 7TH & CHUCKWA

0 • ~

JERRELL TENNIS WHrrES

• 1ons, Inc.

• a1n

0 ' DURANT, OKLA.

0 0

0

TRY OUR DELICIOUS HAM & CHEESE SANDWICH

• •

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Pap 4 THE SOUTHEAS'I:ERN . Durant, otlahoiN JulJ 1~. 19'15 .. .

Gta/lt Accepts. Positio,n . - .

· ; CalYI.D T. Grant, . forme: - celved approval of a $60,000 cbief. -!5-nt .. Ucm sentce, Okla- . federal grant to implement the boma 1 State· · Depl!rtmst of ·solid waste management pro-~eal~ lasbeeadeslpatedact, pam-. "Tbls will assist In ~ ~ eommlssloaer for belptog over 200 communities 4?Jl~eaCal laltb Mnlees, do not presently have an. accordlnc to Dr. R.IARoyCar- - metbod of solid penter, state_ bn ltb cc.nmts~ disPOsal .ID operation slooer. . Grant wQ1 replace . permit iequlremeots. lit Loyd F. Pummlll wiG recently alSo be used for turt~Mtr

· retlrecl, from tbe state's cblel ~reb of lar.arc:lous . waste· 'eovlroDmental admllllsbatlYe · ~1," be stated. , posltiob. • r Grant expects the conswner

I .- Grant Ills seneclln various protecticm service to cootlDue

"' eog~rtog ca~ciUes W.ltb tbe to move in tbe direcUon of state health deparba eDt begin- closer eooperatloo and worklog ning wttb ass~ IIDitary.eo- relatlooship ·wltb ·federal coun-·· gloeer from Marcb 1M9 toSep- · terparts such as- tbe Federal tember 1952. He was senior en- • Drug Admintsvation. "~ look gioeer ~rom 0ctober ,l955 to May for better aDd •more rap~d re-1957, and filled tbe postofpriD- porting of problems to evolve cipal engineer from December tbrough -computerized · re-1963 to the present. He held porting. Tbis can cut dolt'D tbe various engineering positions reacting time between the de-witb Industry durlog tbe interim velopment of a problem and Its of his. employuient with tbe solutloo," he said. state. - · Water quaHty service will

Amckag-:-Grant•s priorities Ll · come iD for some chang's due bis new position ls ·lmprQY.inc to new federal Jaws and ngu-the problem solviDg mectwolsm lations; especially ~ concerning· of eoYiromnental sentces. pub).i.d wa~er supplies .... This Is "This ls DO small tasklnaoor- ' presently UDder study, tbougb gantr.atloo such as this," be tbe speclflc requirements and explataed, ''but the use of ob- time frame for develop~ tbe: jeetlve management ptiDclples prog~m are uocertalo, "!Grant

j will further this goal iD exped- expJained. itlng the delivery of semces Grant bas been acuve In to the pe()ple wbo need tbem." · many professiooal assoclatl~ .

Grant added ttat Iii tbe face serving as president of t~ Ok-of uudget cuts atid manpower . lahoma .Water and Ponution shortag~. envir-eotal ser- Control! Association, and be iS vices will make use Of wbllt · a Registered Professional En~ we can: to Improve. tiM! envlr- · gineer and a Sani ryEngiDeer,l onment1.and health of &be people · U.S. Public Heal ,service.'Re•1· _ who intiabit it. "Tberelsnever sene Cqrps. H lS a member enough ~ple or money to p~o- , of the O~lahoma Public Health! vide tbe ideal sltuatiCJD," beex- Association.

1

plaine(. "but we'll pye 1t all Grant bas n ac~IVe IDi we've gpt! One of tile inostlm- I various Lions Club o~gaot-1 portaot resources 1:5 ~, ~1 - lllU~ ser as a DIStrict

1 ·port ~ tbe slaff of eaTiroD1· ~nor, Pr ident and Pres-1•

mental services as well as tbe ideot of -Board of Trustees for . cltizelis • wbo ~1ft our Lions lOA Youtb Raney In Per-semces ., - klos, Oklahoma.

. "In ~ddttloo," Gran~ com- ,Jolu1 Armst!ong, director of mented, "It Is moat··lmportalit and plmnbing din-tO cany <m good relattans wftb slon._ will also sene as actlog otber ageneles coace~ wttll cbiet of SaJlitaUoo Services.

~ tbe en~rmment." 1 For furtber lnformatlqo coo-Grant-eJpectS certaJo pro- tact Tool Morrow, omce of

grams · of •vlroomstal ser- PubUc Information Oklaboma vices such as tbe I Stat~ DeJXilrtineot ofHea:ltbN.E. x-ray program, eovlrCilD)1!Dta.l _IOtb and Stooewall. P.O. Box surv~Uance program. aDd tbe . 53551, Oklahoma CltJ, OkJaboma radicactive materials program 73105 Phone (l 05) 2?1-5601 to appear before tbe Governor's ' ' reviewlboard in order to obtain· .

' additi?Fl ·far tbelr · effective •

He ,feels · . r other programs

waste 'wblch · Ills - re- .

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l . . . Susan.s Boutique

. R~AqY-TO~~EAR . I .

I ' . I I HAt.TER~ j

UEANS

j . JUNIORS' '& MISSES _ l ' ,

SWfMWEAR

r

(coo't from PC· S) . - .. . rial eclac&UCJD, teacbers are In · laYy demand."

"We're really tryfag to re­cruit people for tbls area, •M tbls DeW faclUty will beip us grMtly." -Wblte went oo to say. ''all of tbe stude4ts we graduated In Industrial edu­caU<m Jast -semester now lave jobs as teacbers aDd tecbDol-· oglsts."

As for phase 2, it Involves tbe power technology ~tioD being ·moved to tbe new Joca­UCJD,- wltb a bulldlag to bb.ase socb Interests as tbe auto­moUve, diesel aDd turboD1 en­gloo tecbllology •

' _ .P-base ~ ls tbe additiOD of drafting Jabs and omces to

- tile main building. ..Our draft­Ing equipment," Wbite said, "is very up to date. In fact, after completion of the w:bole complex of about 60,000 sq. feet, it should be one of: the best Industrial education\ de-putmeots around" ;

Wblte coocluded by saY.ing, ''Graduates of our pr~are getting very good jobs aDd as for tbe new complex, its last du .. . e.

• SPORTS S RJS Former Soutbelstem slue­

cine star, Gary Gray, is stW rapping tbe co~ otf tbe bill, bat DOW <be's getting Jald tD do it. .

Gray Is now playing for tbe ADdersoo Mets of the Western Caroll .. 's League ID class A ball. . .

A'Ccordlog to tbe July 5 edl­tioo o{ Tbe Sporttnc News, Gray is lead.tag tbe league wttb 13 blse bits. His .SZ9 batU• average Is tbird Ill tbe lelpe •Dd bis ave ban•e nms •Dd sa nms tatted Ill are also· amooc tbe lllc-lelders. . -· Gray Is still playing b1s old

·btlastem posUJoo, tblrd bl:se, aod be las a &POd cbaoce to be tbe class A all-star tblrd sacker tbis seasoo.

·Intramural softball regular­tim play wound up Monday night with tbe Loogoecks taking tbeir first loss of tbe seaso~ Tbe Loogoecks lad prevJnnsly been the only •mheateo team In tbe two leagues.

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lost tbelr last pme eltra emtocs.

--playoffs begin TueSday 5:30 faturiDg· tbe tq,

from MCb oftbe two Tbey will continue 21 with one tMm

OD top.

• Tbe major .Iague baseball

by scouts from l'l . tanball hams

•s out bere last week. The ~-day SISSIOD for

tbe sc~ts to Jock oYer pos­slbJ.e players for tbe major Ia ague~

TIM! only Jart of the day tlat gcjt completed for the 35 .-rttclEts was the 60 yard cllsh. 11 others were cancel­led, ac ordlng to Dr. PartJam.

The I eamp will Dot be re­scbedu~ as 1t ·was tbe laSt of four !frtOPs in Oklahoma. Dr. Partwm was bopeful ttJat an- . otber sessloo would be scb­edaled

1 for Southeastern oeu

year.

I sure do wish you guys would throw the ball aUWe sooner· •. tbat guy strMted by me f

MISS ·-CUE

GRAND o -PENING

FAMILY RE-CREATION NTER •

Billiards, Foos Ball, Pin Ball, Novelty Games

Air CQnditione,d and Carpeted for You Comfort

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Free Pool ·on Your Birthday

Briarw9od Shopping c.,nter · •

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