a ,, , . · . . . ~t , er ay - Townsend Memorial Library

80
.• " MARY HARDIN-BAYLOR COLLEGE, BELTON, TEXAS, FEBRUARY 5, 1973 No. 13 Pageant Theme Announced · · First 3-Night Pageant First 3-Night Pageant state queen. "Individually and Collectively" Winner of the Miss Texas Pag- will be the colorful theme of the eant will be launched on a glamor· fourth annual Miss Mary Hardin- ous journey which 'will take her to Baylor Pageant to be staged the Atlantic City, N. J., as state repre- evenings of March 8, 9 and 10 at sentative in the national Miss the Mabee Student Center on the America Pageant, where· she will MH-B campus. compete with state queens from Carolyn Tice, pageant director, throughout the nation for the title said ·the show this· year will be the of Miss America which carries ·a most' ambitious production planned $10,000 scholarship .award ·and the since the start of · the annuar pro- opPortunity for a year of personlil gram at Mai-y Hardin-Baylor: appearances throughout the United · States. The state queen also wiil She said it will be a show de- have the opportunity to gain other signed to depict the poise, grace national scholarships awarded to and beauty of the contestants who finalists in the national pageant are seeking the Miss Mary Hardin- and to contestants judged to be Baylor title, and it will be a show outstanding in talent. designed to please the capacity au- The 25 contestants in the Pag- dience expected all three nights. eant will compete in evening gown, The new Miss Mary Hardin-Bay- . lor College will be crowned at the swunsuit and climax . of the final competition by Contestants Misses A. R. th t . · M" M H d" Slater Foods, Jamce DeBolt; Al- e re 1nng Iss ary ar m- h Ch" h h tl 1 · i) bb" Od C P a 1, Lyn T ompson; Alp a ,. . ,e le .om ox. Mu Gamma, Linda Moore; Baptist The new Mary Hardin-Baylor Student Union, Stephanie Barrett; queen of grace, beauty and talent Bells Staff, Susan Keller; Burt illiiNifhiifi"•idiim; eiqiliii..S·'bhiliiPiifd:t plans. to st ... e. crew members will. be awarded a full . tuition l;)orm, Cheryl Mof're; Freshman the •nnu•l event Is the· Mllbee Student scholarship. She will also gain <;:lass, Lanu Bunch; Gettys Dorm, _...... ;.;..... ;... ________________ -,--------'-------------- 'the 'right to represent Macy Har· Debbie Ham and mstorical Pbila in the :rexas Pag- Society, Sharon Pavoggi. .. Sae. e_ch, .to Sc. hool Alpha Theta, Jennifer Jordan; Phi C I b .,. ·. d Ch rl D r . . Beta Lambda, Mary Wright; Phi .. e. ,, , .. . , er ay .and Pal Mary Hardin-Baylor College cele· women students through most of ing of the Alumni and Ex-Students and Physical Education gave a completing the list are Misses brated 12B years of service to Tex- itll ltistory. This will be 'the soc· Association, followed·by luncheons speech to the Parent-Teacher Or- .Recreational Association, Theresa as. education the weekend of Feb. ond year in which Charter Day both on and off the campus. ganization at CatP.r Elementary Gantt; Royal Academia Society, S When its 18415. charter by tho bas Included both men and women The morning chapel service in- school in Temple, Texas. Dr. Gloria Mattson; Senior Class, Mary Republic of Texas was spiritually students and graduates. eluded a tribute to the late Dr. Hilla spoke on the meaning and Ann Krupicka; Sophomore Class, renewed in ceremonies ranging MH-U President Bobby E. Parker William H. Vann of Belton deliver- value of play and physical educa- Carol Roen; Stribling Dorm, Betty from traditional candlellghting to CormaJlv dedicated the new $800. ed by Nell hGracel Rayi Bahrclay, otf tion to the elementary school Davis; Student Government Asso- d " ' Houston• t e a umn c arge o child i ti T i F k • T a State the dedication of a new stu ent 000 Mabee Student Center Satur· 1 'b D 1 St h Sh · c a on, err Y e, ex s t d sen ora, Y or s one am an- He stressed the need for some- Education Association, 'Peggy Sim- cen er. ay. non, of San Antonio; and the alum- one· in· the e'ducatlonal process to mers and Young Democrats, Jan Hundreds of and Actlvlties Friday with reg- ni address by Sybil Leonard Armes, 'direct the · play experiences of Westfall. · · graduates from across the istratlon at Hardy Hall; a meet· Dallas, who is a poet, lecturer, mu- children, and he further stated Tickets for each performance can returned to the Bolton campus, be- ina of the Council of the Alumni slcian, author, and trustee of that the Jjest person for that task bo obtained at the oollege book· glnnlni Friday, Feb. 2, for one of and Kx-Students Association at Mary Hardln·Baylor College. Is a certlthid, qualified elementary store or through Dorothy Dunn, tho largest celebrations In MH-B Townsend Library; a public con- Following the dedication of the 'school physical educator. 211 ·Burt, beginning Feb. 26. history, which extended beyond cert by the award-winning Belton Mabee student center, Dr. and liiiiOiiii;;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;:=·=-------;;.;;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;;;:;;;::;;;;o;;;;;:;;;;:;;:iiiit midnight on Saturday. Hlah School Band at W. W. Wal· Mrs. Parker hosted a reception at ·' · Tho college recently completed an open house at the president'& homo on campus. MEDICAL MISSIONS CO, NFERENCE the physical and academic transl· · Durlna tho latter part of tho af· . tlon to a fully coeducational col- Saturday eventa began with a ternoon, the Health and Physical Date 1 le11o after serving predominately chapel service and a bualness meet· Education Department conducted a championship tennis exhibition and IIYmnastlcs ahow In the Good· L.T.C. mnn Gymnasium, and the Home Locatlon 1 Economics Department sponsored February 9-10, 1973. The conference beglna with supper et the Holiday Inn (NASA) at 6100 p.m. Friday, and concludea following the evening aeaalon on Satur- day. Holldaylnn, NASA, 1300 NASA Boulevard. NASA Ia an open house In Wells Science Houslng 1 Hall. located about 20 miles aouth of Houaton, 1-45. The MH·B Contingent Ia planning to stay at the Cullen Nursing Building on the Houston Baptlat T. L. C. What?1 Leaderahlp Training Conference Whom?1 Thoae who want to give ••• learn true tender loving care. When? 1 February 16, 17, and 18th. Where?1 Dallaa How?1 Bua, we leave 4.00 p.r:n. Friday, Feb. 16th, behind Hardy. Coat?1 $10.00 Room $ 2.00 Tranaportatlon. Approxlmately1 $6.00 Food ------------- SUBTRACT1 $5.00 (reservation fee (due Feb. 14th by SaOO). If you h1ve been wh1t the IIU Ia, 1nd how you c1n jllrtlclplle or lu•t to h1v1 1 gr11t time with same Chrlttl•nt. T HI I II I T·l (For more lnfromatlon contact 1\lchard Mangum BSU Office, 939··5811, Ext. 32 The paront11 of students who were on cnmpua Charter Day attended a special Parents' Dinner In tho West Parlor of Hardy Hall. Enr- ller, a paront·fnoulty "Rap Ses- alon" hnd been held In Walton Chnpe), Mnry Hnrdln·Bnylor's trndltlonnl aorvlco followed In Wnlton Chapel nt 8:00 p.m. nrter n candlollr.tht dlnnor In JJnrdy Hnll tor alumni, eX·Hludenta, nnd tho colloRo fnmlly, At D:SO p.m., open houae WaR hold tor nil Chnrtor Dny gue11ts In t.ho pnrlora of llnrdy Hall. UoRII1 wore Acndomln, Academia Rnom; Hlalarlcnl Phlln, Weat Ill'· eoptlon Rnom: nnd Mu Etn Bot.n, Frnlottnlty noom. Chnt•tor, Dny closlld wllh n mltl· nh.lht mtu•ch of Honlora hy cnndlo· ._ ____________________ _. llllht. ' College campua. Co1t1 All meala and lodging will be the reaponslblllty of the students. 10 dollara Ia the beat estimate of the trip. Program1 Personnel1 Mltalon•rv Doctort1 Glynn Bueden, Columbia - Hal Boone, Uganda Edward (Bud) Dosher, Nlgera - Kathleen Jonea, Indonesia T. E. Douthit, Korea - Jac.k Talor, Nigeria Nurtlll · Jackie Euband, Nigeria- Anne Sue Cllft, Ghana lt1ff members from Porelgn Mlaalon loarda Edma Francea Dawkins- Other FMB personnel Who Is Invited? YOUI All atudents related to the medical or pera-medl· cal field (pre-dental, pre·med, pre·nuralng, physical therapy, mecllclne, nuralng), You do not have to be committed to mlaalonary medicine. If you can make the trip, wrlte1 Richard Mangum, Box 546, MH·B Station, Bolton, Texaa, 76514 or call tho BSU office at 939-5131 1, olCt. 32. WHAT MORI CAN I lAY? ;, t.·. I i ,. !.' ....... ···- ........ .. . . ..., ' .' . . '

Transcript of a ,, , . · . . . ~t , er ay - Townsend Memorial Library

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MARY HARDIN-BAYLOR COLLEGE, BELTON, TEXAS, FEBRUARY 5, 1973 No. 13

Pageant Theme Announced · · First 3-Night Pageant First 3-Night Pageant state queen.

"Individually and Collectively" Winner of the Miss Texas Pag-will be the colorful theme of the eant will be launched on a glamor· fourth annual Miss Mary Hardin- ous journey which 'will take her to Baylor Pageant to be staged the Atlantic City, N. J., as state repre­evenings of March 8, 9 and 10 at sentative in the national Miss the Mabee Student Center on the America Pageant, where· she will MH-B campus. compete with state queens from

Carolyn Tice, pageant director, throughout the nation for the title said ·the show this· year will be the of Miss America which carries ·a most' ambitious production planned $10,000 scholarship . award ·and the since the start of · the annuar pro- opPortunity for a year of personlil gram at Mai-y Hardin-Baylor: appearances throughout the United

· States. The state queen also wiil She said it will be a show de- have the opportunity to gain other signed to depict the poise, grace national scholarships awarded to and beauty of the contestants who finalists in the national pageant are seeking the Miss Mary Hardin- and to contestants judged to be Baylor title, and it will be a show outstanding in talent. designed to please the capacity au- The 25 contestants in the Pag­dience expected all three nights. eant will compete in evening gown,

The new Miss Mary Hardin-Bay- . lor College will be crowned at the swunsuit and ~ent di~ons. climax . of the final competition by Contestants mcl~de Misses A. R. th t. · M" M H d" Slater Foods, Jamce DeBolt; Al-e re 1nng Iss ary ar m- h Ch" h h tl 1 · i) bb" Od C P a 1, Lyn T ompson; Alp a ,. ~~.!>r, . ,e le .om ox. Mu Gamma, Linda Moore; Baptist

The new Mary Hardin-Baylor Student Union, Stephanie Barrett; queen of grace, beauty and talent Bells Staff, Susan Keller; Burt

~tiiililillrni illiiNifhiifi"•idiim; eiqiliii..S·'bhiliiPiifd:t plans. to st ... e. crew members will. be awarded a full . tuition l;)orm, Cheryl Mof're; Freshman the •nnu•l event Is the· Mllbee Student scholarship. She will also gain <;:lass, Lanu Bunch; Gettys Dorm,

_......;.;.....;... ________________ -,--------'-------------- 'the 'right to represent Macy Har· Debbie Ham and mstorical Pbila din~B~lor in the Mis~ :rexas Pag- Society, Sharon Pavoggi.

~~·:··i .. -~·-~-~;, Sae. e_ch, .to Sc. hool Alpha Theta, Jennifer Jordan; Phi

C I b .,. ·. d Ch rl D r . . Beta Lambda, Mary Wright; Phi .. e. ~ .~a ,, , . · . . . ~t , er ay Hi~: :re~h:· ~:;!;t~~n~ ~fif<!~r~ ~~!~:~~ :,~i:~~rf~ddel .and Pal Mary Hardin-Baylor College cele· women students through most of ing of the Alumni and Ex-Students and Physical Education gave a completing the list are Misses

brated 12B years of service to Tex- itll ltistory. This will be 'the soc· Association, followed·by luncheons speech to the Parent-Teacher Or- .Recreational Association, Theresa as. education the weekend of Feb. ond year in which Charter Day both on and off the campus. ganization at CatP.r Elementary Gantt; Royal Academia Society, S When its 18415. charter by tho bas Included both men and women The morning chapel service in- school in Temple, Texas. Dr. Gloria Mattson; Senior Class, Mary Republic of Texas was spiritually students and graduates. eluded a tribute to the late Dr. Hilla spoke on the meaning and Ann Krupicka; Sophomore Class, renewed in ceremonies ranging MH-U President Bobby E. Parker William H. Vann of Belton deliver- value of play and physical educa- Carol Roen; Stribling Dorm, Betty from traditional candlellghting to CormaJlv dedicated the new $800. ed by Nell hGracel Rayi Bahrclay, otf tion to the elementary school Davis; Student Government Asso-

d " ' Houston• t e a umn c arge o child i ti T i F k • T a State the dedication of a new stu ent 000 Mabee Student Center Satur· 1 'b D 1 St h Sh · c a on, err Y e, ex s t d sen ora, Y or s one am an- He stressed the need for some- Education Association, 'Peggy Sim-

cen er. ay. non, of San Antonio; and the alum- one· in· the e'ducatlonal process to mers and Young Democrats, Jan Hundreds of cx-stude~~ and Actlvlties ~egan Friday with reg- ni address by Sybil Leonard Armes, 'direct the · play experiences of Westfall. · ·

graduates from across the ~ount~ istratlon at Hardy Hall; a meet· Dallas, who is a poet, lecturer, mu- children, and he further stated Tickets for each performance can returned to the Bolton campus, be- ina of the Council of the Alumni slcian, author, and trustee of that the Jjest person for that task bo obtained at the oollege book· glnnlni Friday, Feb. 2, for one of and Kx-Students Association at Mary Hardln·Baylor College. Is a certlthid, qualified elementary store or through Dorothy Dunn, tho largest celebrations In MH-B Townsend Library; a public con- Following the dedication of the 'school physical educator. 211 ·Burt, beginning Feb. 26. history, which extended beyond cert by the award-winning Belton Mabee student center, Dr. and liiiiOiiii;;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;:=·=-------;;.;;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;;;:;;;::;;;;o;;;;;:;;;;:;;:iiiit midnight on Saturday. Hlah School Band at W. W. Wal· Mrs. Parker hosted a reception at ·' ·

Tho college recently completed ~:rd~h;ro~~; ~nd an open house at the president'& homo on campus. MEDICAL MISSIONS CO, NFERENCE the physical and academic transl· · Durlna tho latter part of tho af· . tlon to a fully coeducational col- Saturday eventa began with a ternoon, the Health and Physical Date1 le11o after serving predominately chapel service and a bualness meet· Education Department conducted

a championship tennis exhibition and IIYmnastlcs ahow In the Good·

L.T.C. mnn Gymnasium, and the Home Locatlon1 Economics Department sponsored

February 9-10, 1973. The conference beglna with supper et the Holiday Inn (NASA) at 6100 p.m. Friday, and concludea following the evening aeaalon on Satur­day.

Holldaylnn, NASA, 1300 NASA Boulevard. NASA Ia

an open house In Wells Science Houslng1 Hall.

located about 20 miles aouth of Houaton, 1-45. The MH·B Contingent Ia planning to stay at the Cullen Nursing Building on the Houston Baptlat

T. L. C. What?1 Leaderahlp Training Conference Whom?1 Thoae who want to give ••• learn true tender

loving care. When? 1 February 16, 17, and 18th. Where?1 Dallaa How?1 Bua, we leave 4.00 p.r:n. Friday, Feb. 16th, behind

Hardy. Coat?1 $10.00 Room

$ 2.00 Tranaportatlon. Approxlmately1 $6.00 Food

-------------SUBTRACT1 $5.00 (reservation fee (due Feb. 14th by SaOO). If you h1ve been wond•~lng wh1t the IIU Ia, 1nd how you c1n jllrtlclplle or lu•t ~h1t to h1v1 1 gr11t time with same Chrlttl•nt.

T HI I II I T·l (For more lnfromatlon contact 1\lchard Mangum

BSU Office, 939··5811, Ext. 32

The paront11 of students who were on cnmpua Charter Day attended a special Parents' Dinner In tho West Parlor of Hardy Hall. Enr­ller, a paront·fnoulty "Rap Ses­alon" hnd been held In Walton Chnpe),

Mnry Hnrdln·Bnylor's trndltlonnl cnndlollt~htlnR aorvlco followed In Wnlton Chapel nt 8:00 p.m. nrter n candlollr.tht dlnnor In JJnrdy Hnll tor alumni, eX·Hludenta, nnd tho colloRo fnmlly,

At D:SO p.m., open houae WaR hold tor nil Chnrtor Dny gue11ts In t.ho pnrlora of llnrdy Hall. UoRII1 wore Ro~·nl Acndomln, Academia Rnom; Hlalarlcnl Phlln, Weat Ill'· eoptlon Rnom: nnd Mu Etn Bot.n, Frnlottnlty noom.

Chnt•tor, Dny closlld wllh n mltl· nh.lht mtu•ch of Honlora hy cnndlo· ._ ____________________ _. llllht. '

College campua. Co1t1 All meala and lodging will be the reaponslblllty of the

students. ~ 1 0 dollara Ia the beat estimate of the trip. Program1 Personnel1

Mltalon•rv Doctort1 Glynn Bueden, Columbia - Hal Boone, Uganda Edward (Bud) Dosher, Nlgera - Kathleen Jonea,

Indonesia T. E. Douthit, Korea - Jac.k Talor, Nigeria Nurtlll · Jackie Euband, Nigeria- Anne Sue Cllft, Ghana lt1ff members from Porelgn Mlaalon loarda Edma Francea Dawkins- Other FMB personnel

Who Is Invited? YOUI All atudents related to the medical or pera-medl· cal field (pre-dental, pre·med, pre·nuralng, physical therapy, mecllclne, nuralng), You do not have to be committed to mlaalonary medicine.

If you can make the trip, wrlte1 Richard Mangum, Box 546, MH·B Station, Bolton, Texaa, 76514 or call tho BSU office at 939-5131 1, olCt. 32.

WHAT MORI CAN I lAY?

• ;,

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·~.

I i ,. !.'

....... ···- ........ .. . . ..., ' .' . . '

PAGE 2 THE BELLS FEBRUARY 5, 1973

License Plate Reciprocity .Information F~·- ·. .~--..... _. .. "'.-- .. -.,..,.... ... _.. -=--~.,.,..- - .... --.- ................. .,. • ·-· ---- -

~·· Full reciprocity will be granted to non-resident owners and operators of passenger cars using the highways of this State so long as the out of state license plates are valid provided the owner of operator remains in the status of a visitor in this State.

At such time as a non-resident owner or operator establishes residency in our State or enters into gainful employment, his ve­hicle may be operated for thirty (30) days thereafter, after which time the vehicle must be currently registered in Texas.

Non-resident, full-time students attending accredited colleges and universities are granted fulll reciprocity. A part-time job is considered only inCidental to the student's education and thus will not preclude him from receiving full reciprocity on his home state licenses plates.

Full reciprocity on non-resident passenger cars and commer­ci'al vehicles not used in a commercial enterprise operated by members of the Armed Forces, in accordance with the provisions of the Soldiers and Sailors Civil Relief Act of 1940, as amended, will be granted full reciprocity. These privileges are also granted to members of the immediate family.

All privileges granted herein covering passenger cars shall also apply to light commercial vehicles not exceeding a manu­facturer's rated carrying capacity of one ton and not used in a commercial enterprise. These privileges are also granted to non­resident owners and operators of recreational vehicles such as travel trailers and motor homes. Utility trailers are also included.

Our basic purpose in establishing a thirty-day criterion for non-resident passenger cars is to bring about a fair and equitable degree of uniformity. Theretofore, neither the non-resident nor our enfOrcement officers knew what to do without checking a list of the various times and extensions granted each jurisdiction.

The provisions as outlined above are effective April 1, 1973-­the beginning of our 1973 Texas Registration Year.

----0-----

93rd Congress Faces Hettie Two Years

Enrollment Up at MH-B

OBITUARY FOR WAR ON POVERTY By Ron Hendren

WASHINGTON - Even as the body of Lyndon Baines John­son lay in state in the Austin, Texas library which bears his name, his successor in the White House made clear his intentions to abolish the Office of Economic Opportunity, the room of Mr. Johnson's battle gainst poverty.

It was ironic that the news of OEO's demise should come at the time of Lyndon Johnson's death, but the news ilself was no surprise. The organization's life has been as stormy as was the Johnson Presidency.

Head Start was perhaps OEO's best known creation. A pro­gram to the aid uunderprivileged pre-schoolers, it was the mainstay which assued the agency's continued funding by Congress in the midst of failures on other more turbulent fronts, failures like the Job Corps, which created expectations both in Congress and among its participants which the program's administrators knew it could not fulfill.

Therein lies the real cause of OEO's failure and the failure of the "war on poverty" itself: expectations were created, among the poor and within the American public as a whole, which the government had no intentions of fulfilling indeed, which it knew would be impossible to meet.

The existing programs administered by OEO will be divided among the various federal agencies, the bulk of them going to

Enrollment figures at Mary Ha.r- the D:pa!"m,ent of Healt~, Education a,!"d Welfare. P~edictably, the din-Baylor College have taken a orgamzat1on s controversial legal serv1ces program IS not a'!'ong most unusual turn this spring, as, th?se pr~posed to be transfe~red, and presumably the P~es1dent for the first time in memory there w1ll a!ila'" pus~ ~or the creat10~ of a separate legal serv1ces co­are more spring semester students oporat1on more d1rectly under h1s control. than there were in the fall semes- R. Sargent Shriver, the Democratic candidate for Vice Presi­ter. Though the college has veri- dent in 1972, is OEO's best known former director. Known on fied records only back to 1964, Capitol Hill as a "super-salesman", Shriver was able to wrangle no one remembers another time funds for the agency's programs but failed to deliver the results when the national trend of a drop he so eloquently promised •• from fall enrollment to spring was not true at MH-B, too. He is likely to join the large group which will no doubt

oppose the dismantaling of OEO when Congress considers the On campus enrollment, including President's fiscal year 1973-7 4 budget proposed, scheduled to be

The 93rd Congress of the United States could be a hectic and night classes, was 814 at the close printed this week. The Administration exudes confidence that the turbulent two years, if indications on the opening day, January 3, of registration Monday. Fall, 1972, President's proposal will carry in Congress: We don't intend to do mean anything. on-campus enrollment was 805. En- away with OEO programs, hey say, merely transfer them to the

On the opening day alone in the House of Representatives rollment ,figures are not yet avail- appropriate agencies for adm;nistration. more than 222 bills were tossed in the hopper by eager Congress- able from extension classes at What the fail to add . th t h"dd men. In addition, there were 28 resolutions the first day. Central Texas College and Fort Y IS • a 1 en away in the cavernous

The Senate did not receive proposed bills the opening day Hood nor from consortuim class- bbowlsl off HHEWEW, programs w.hhclchh now oparate wundfofrasm6 __ _ b t · eel th d d .£' th t ff · · t t" 1 ' owe s o , programs WI now operate under the flag of u reserv e secon ay 10r a 0 enslve agams na lona es at Central Texas College ~nd the Executive Office of the President will have little muscle of prob'.::~ng the church-state issues that will be on the agenda of Temple Junior College. their own to use in fighting for surviyal at the departmental money the 93rd Congress will be tax credits for aid to parochial schools, 'l'he 814 represents a 7.5 percent trough. Thus, good programs in time will stand a better -than- fair proposals for a public school prayer amendment to the U. S. Con- increase over the spring semester chance of perishing along with the bad .• stltution, .. and tax reform proposals affecting churches and their or 1972. Most of the increase was There's a word for it. It's called blacklash. It's what happens Institutions. . . - . il) full-tim,e students, accordiqg to_ when expectations consistently exceed, and by astonding margins,

Other church-lnt.erest legislation Will mclude national health Mrs. R. T. Normand, registrar. when expectations consistently exceed and· by astonishlning services, pension plans and their protection, education, both ele- Ther'! are 590 full and 224 part- that which Is delievered. So It was with the OEO •. "'entary-secondary and higher, welfare reform, and the struggle time students this spring. o~--o----for peace In the world.

As an indication of the extent of the concerns of the Congress, the 92nd Congress which ended last November had before It a total of 25,354 measures of various sorts. .

Each Congress Is divided Into two one-year sesslons. When a Congress ends, all of the legislation before It automatically dies and must be reintroduced In the next Congress If further action Ia to be taken.

In the House of Representatives, when Republican Leader Ger· aid .Ford (R, Mich.) Introduced Rep. Carl Albert (D, Okla.) as the new Speaker of the House, he said with tongue In cheek, "I would like to congratulate our· distinguished Speaker and to assure him

Another increase was in the number of men students at MHB. The 27.8 percent men student popu­lation represents a 3 percent in­crease over a year ago.

Plano Program Sat for Feb. 5

this I will support him - one thousand per centl" . On the Senate side of the Congress, the following brief ex- A plano program based on a to· change between Democrat Malorlty leader, Mike Mansfield (D, tally new concept of teaching mu· Mont.) and Republican Minority leader, Hugh Scott (R. Pa.) took sic will begin at Mary Hardin-Bay· place on the opening dey. lor College February 5. . Mr. Scott. ''I take It that no bills may be Introduced today, The Keyboard Arts Program, one but 1 would eaaume that tomorrow billa may be Introduced and o[ muslc study at the plano wlll resolutlona aubmlttec:l, and that lpt!teches will be me~e tomorrow be dlvlded into ·throe clasae~, for for Senetora to enloy,, but none tOday. It that correct? those 7 to 12 years old, a class for

Mr. Mansfield. That Ia correct. The regular workaday day teen·agcrs, and an adult class. As will begin tomorrow. Today Ia a day of swearing In and the a result of lntcnslve research the usual resolutions which will be presented shortly; but beginning Keyboard Arts concept ls bas~d on tomorrow, what the dlatlngulahed Republican leader has said Is group Instruction. correct."

Mr. Scott. "In other words, swearlnga In today; swearing at Offered by the Preparatory Dl·

Stuclenta who received N.tlen•l Direct Student l.ollna, Nunlng Loins, Nunlng Schol•nhlps, or Educ•tlon•l Opportunity Grents during the fall •mtater •rHI •re to receive them during the spring 11mnter c•n pick up those checks 1t the fln1nclal •ld oHice. Students who have •ppllc1tlona pending for •ny of the progrema should checlc with the flnancl•l 1ld office the WHk of ,.bru1ry 11. Checks for recipients of the Tuition Equell• zatlon Grenta should be errlvlng by the third WHk In hbruery.

EASTER PAGEANT Plana are being made for the Easter Pageant. The casting com­mittee Ia meeting and people are beglng considered for various parta. If you are lntereated In a role or being on a committee, please fill out this form and drop It In the campus mailbox&

EASTER PAGEANT MH-B, Box 343 Campua

Name -·----··-····-·-··------·-·· ····-····· --· ····--···-···--·-··--······-····--·--·- •..

Addresa ·······-···-·························- ......... Phone --·-···----··-··--·-····

:laaalflcatlon ···-·····-···-···-········· ···--·-···-·-··-···· .. ···-····----·------··-· leterl" vision of the Department of Mualc

Thus, the 93rd Congress got off to a hectic atart for a long and taught by Mrs. Sharon Wilson, !;i5;i5;i~i5:555555555555555555= two-year battle that promises to get very complicated before It Ia the program is for beglnnlng plano r over. st.udcnts or reinforced learning of

-------o------- the oxperlonced student. BSU CALENDAR OF EVINTS - 1973

Ice Age ComingP Cost of the 11 to 115 week course Feb. 16-18 Or. Cesare Emillanl, University of Miami Geology Profenor, wlll be $80.00. Two lc11ona will

says there's another Ice Age coming and It may be lust around be taught to all groupa each wcok. Mer. 9·1 1 the corner. By examining corea of sediment from the sea bottom, On Mondays and Thundaya, the 20 22 Dr. Emillanl was able to determine that perloda of freezing In the yuungcr class will meet from 4:00 Apr. • earth'a hlatory came much more frequently than science had es- to 4:30 p.m. and the teen·alle elm tlmated, and the Intervening perloda of warmth were much shorter. from 11:30 to 6:00 p.m. The tlmo May 21·30

The February laaue of SCIENCE DIGEST reporta that Dr. Emili· or tho adult cla11o1 wlll be doter· Aug, Hl-20 ani and other global cllmetologlltl determined the next Ice Age mlnod later. may come In a few thousand yean, but are concerned that men'a All rluMHoll will bo limited to 10 dlaruptlve effect on the environment could cauae one to develop studcnt11,

State Leaderahlp Training Conference -Fort Worth

Ml11lona Conference - Fort Worth International Student Conference -

Peleatlne, Texaa Mexico Million Trip - Valle Hermoao, Mexico Glorieta Student Week - Glorieta, New Mexico

about two hundred yeara from now. Tho 110al of tho Keyboard Art• -------o------- Program Ia fluent reading and un­

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1 .-.. --.' '" ... ,-' \1\"n" ~' ~...,, ~'I 1H Genluaea may be dunces In the cl111room If Einstein 11 anv. host ln1trumont for loarnlns Ute example. Hit later triumph• In aclence were hardly foreahadoweCI fundamentals of musto, but through In hl1 youth, according to a b11taeller excerpt In the february SCI· th1~1 ~oyb~t'~ Ar~ t IY;tomthpup:ls Publlahed weekly •t Miry H1rdln•81ylor College 11 • p1rt of ENCE DIGEST. •······· w 10 11 0 0 ro 11 0 0 0 or n· the atudent 1ctlvlw. Return ~1t•a• guer1ntHd,

Aa 1 young atudent, he had difficulty In achaol, Will • aoclal •trumcnts 01111Y· l!nttrtd It the Poat Office In Belton, TtKII, •• ucondoel111 loner, did not 1Hend molt of hla college claua1, end \IW hla doc· Studl'nt. ahoulll pro-enroll for meHtr under the Act of Merch 3, 1873, torel the1l1 relected. The early yeara of adulthood were onea In tho courao lmmodlatoly, by oon· d . 1 .,_11 which hla genlua waa lergelv. unrecognized, and tht high point tnotlng Mra, Shnron Wilson at I! ltor ··············-····"··-·--.. ··--·--··---··--· .. -······-··· Ulln rw •r of hll younger ye1ra w11 when ht finally Wll: eblt to l1nd 1 Mary Uardln·DP)'lor C~lloso 989- A11l1t1nt l!dltora -····-···--··· ...... lhtlll Rlcherdaon, Vonle Hopklnl full·tlm• lob 11 a clerk In a patent office. · DOll or 089-1041. 8u11ne11 M1n1ger ---··-·-··---····-····· .. ·-·-····-·· Janice Andrew•

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Accreditation for Law Enforcement Degree Received BASEBALL

FEBRUARY 5, 1973 1HE IB.LS PAGE 3

Accreditation for their law en- sortium program with Central Tex-

Texas Girls' Choir's Annual Piano Contest

foreement degree has been receiv- as College in Killeen. The same BEGINS ed by Mary Hardin-Baylor College type degree program is pending Prizes have been increased and Judges will prejudge repertoire fro~ the Texas Law Enforcement for the Temple Junior College con- age limit raised for Texas Girls' listings and will pass on the eligi-Offtcer Standards and Education. sortium. Choir's eight annual Piano Con- bility of each contestant before as-

On Wednesday, Feb. 7, 1973, t t A rU 13 14 d Director of Education Programs At the presentation of the certi- the Mary Hardin-Baylor College es P • an 15 in Semi- signing preliminary auditions.

of the Commission, Wordie W. Bur- ficate to President Parker, Mr. Bur- baseball club will officially be- nary South, Town Hall, Fort Worth. All music must be memorized row, presented a certificate signify. row said, "We are pleased to join gin practice for the 1973 sea· Girls between the ages of 10 a~d and contestants will be judged in ing the certification to Dr. Bobby the other profes~ional accrediting,, son. The baseball diamond Is 15 from throughout the United the areas of technique, interprets­E. Parker, president of MH-B. . groups that certtfy ~?ur school.. belnt readied for play and a States may apply to enter the con- tion, stage presence, rhythm, musl-

The college becomes one of He furth~r r':marked, .we. ap~rec_t- practice and game schedule Is test. Application forms should be cianship, memorization, phrasing, twenty;five bachelors degree pro- ate th': fme J~b your mstitution 1s being prepared. requested by writing Texas Girls' pedaling, tone quality and impres-grams in the state to meet certifi- doing m helpmg to. ma~e law e~; Choir, 3341 Edith Lane, Fort sion of total performance. cation requirements. There are forcement a profession m Texas. Mr. William Harlow, of the Worth, Texas 76117. Applications Preliminary auditions will be also 40 junior college and 5 gradu- In accepting the certification for History department, hu volun- must be returned postmarked n~ -played Friday night, April 13, and .ate programs certified in profes- the college, Dr. Parker said, "This teered to sponsor the club later than March.15. Saturday, April 14, with imal au­sional law enforcement in Texas. is an attainment we've been look- through this season. He will di- Contestants Wlll be competing ditions Sunday afternoon Aprll

· f d d k d reet the oHlcers of the club, for more than $500 in awards. Win- 15. ' -Certification is based on the in- mg orwar to an we ta e pri e ner will receive $250 and a trophy

stitution meeting core curriculum in meeting· the Commission's high ~:n s:~~:!.\~':~ a:-:.,:n!~ and will appear as guest soloist at requirements. Texas was the first standards." the coach in game situations. -· the TGC spring concert in Will

Mrs. T. Smith McCorkle, who has taught piano at Texas Christian University, Texas Wesleyan Col­lege and Kansas City University, will be chairman of judges. She is the widow of the dean of the School of Fine Arts at TCU.

state to establish a required core Much of our educational purpose Rogers Memorial Auditorium. -curriculum in law enforcement ed- is to prepare people for public Men who would like te play Other awards will be $100 and a ucation. service, said Dr. Parker. "There is baseball should report to this trophy for second place, $50 and a

Director Burrow said that com- no greater calling in public service meeting at 4:00 Wednesday af.. trophy for third place, $25 and a mission policy dictates that all than law enforcement" remarked ternoon. It Is very Important ribbon for fourth place and a rib-peace officers must be certified the MH-B leader. that we begin practice In pre- bon for fifth place. within one year of their employ- Law enforcement programs in paratlon for our first game In Repertoire must include one

Oth~;r judges will include Dr. Isabel Scionti, nationally known pi­anist and teacher who toured in­ternationally as a duo-pianist with Silvio Sci!onti. Harris Cavender and Lee Henrichs, Fort Worth pi­

ment. This certification is avail- Texas had 12,042 students enrolled tarly ~rch. Play Balli number from each of the baroque, able only through commission during the 1972 fall semester. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ classical, romantic and contempo-training and accredited education Graduates of accredited programs - rary periods and must be original programs. such as MH-B's are qualified as Measure of Man: piano music literature, not ar-

The Texas Commission on Law peace officers uJ)on ·graduation, Not _ How did he die?" rangements. Enforcement Officer Standards and having met educational require· But- "How did he live?" -----------------,----------

ano teachers.

Education serves all law enforce- ments. M M• • H d Not - "What dt"d he gat"n?." rs. llftle en erson men a~encies in the state. Dr. Sam Nicholson is the Direc- But - "What did he give?"

MH-B's degree in law enforce- tor of Inter-Institutional Programs 5 I d 0 d SurTehetshee awreortthheofunaitsmatno, masea- . e ecle utstan ··ng c.•t•lzen ment is available through the con- for Mary Hardin-Baylor College.

NOTICE SENIORSI

Applications for degrees must be filed by March 2 for stu­dents graduating in May or August. Fill out application in Reg­istrar's office and pay $15.00 fee in Business offfice at the time of application is made.

The Graduate Record Examination or the National Teachers Examination is required of all graduates. Packets may be picked up in the Registrar's officce or the Dean of Students office.

The NTE will be given at MH-BC on April 7-packet should be mailed by March 8.

The GRE will be given at MH-BC on April 28-packet should .be mailed. by. Mar.ch .14. . . .. .. ..,. , _ ..... ,.. . • ~

May graduates who are taking correspondence eourses to fulfill graduation requirements must have courses completed

a man, regardless of birth. . . Not - "What was his station? Mrs. Mmme Henderson, chair- lution, United Daughters of the But _ "Had he a heart?" · man of the Department of Foreign Confederacy, and the First Baptist And _ "How did he pl~y his Languages at Mary Hardin-Baylor Church of Belton.

God given part? Was he ever ~allege, is ~~~e~ in a special edi- Professional associations include ready with a word of good t~on of t?e Dtctl~nary of Interna- the American Association of Uni-cheer To lbring back a t~onal Biography. The four-vol- versity Professors, Texas State smile.' or banish a tear? ume, international publication, Teachers Association, Texas For-

Not _ "What was his ch~ch" will include the outstanding citi- eign Language Association, and Not - "What was his creed?" zens ,from 137 nations. others. Mrs. Henderson is a put But - "Had he befriended A graduate of Mary Hardin-Bay. president of the Central Texas Din-

Those really in need?" lor, Mrs. Henderson holds a mas- ner Club. Not - "What did the sketch ter's degree from Southwestern Honored numerous times, Mrs.

in the newspaper say?" University, Georgetown and bas Henderson's biography is also in-But · ~ "How-"riiany ··were · ilorry done graduate work in' Mexico at eluded in "Who's Who tn the

when he passed away?" the Instituto Guadalajara and the World of Women," "Two Thousand and finals taken by May 1. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. Instituto de Filologia Espanola. Women of Achievement," "Success-'--------------------------.1 The Killeen native widow of ful and Creative Personalities of Reid E. Henderson h~ been on the World," and others. Unique to

SPRING INTRAMURAL$ FOR MEN A full program of Intramural sports will be offered this

spring by the Health and Physical Education Department. This Is the proposed schedule of actlvltles offered. Dr. Hills, who will direct these actlvltles, hopes the men on campus wtll par­ticipate In and end enloy the following activities: Jan. 31 - Three-man basketball competition Feb. 7 - Three-man basketball competition Feb. 14 - Three-man basketball competition Feb. 21 - Paddleball tournament

Singles, doubles, and coed competition Feb. 28 - Table tennis

Double elimination tournament Mar. 7 - Shuffleboard

Double elimination, doubles and coed Mar. 14 Bowlln9.

Men s and ladles' tournament at same time Two person teams - on handicap

Mar. 22 Badminton Doubles and singles, double elimination

Mar. 28 - Golf , No handicap - 18 holes

Apr 4 Swimming Meet and Water Polo Boys and girls swimming meet together Men'• water polo competition

Apr. 11 - Tennis Slnglea and Doubles competition

Apr. 25 - Softball - Pick up te.ams and play May 2 - Softball - Faculty, atudent contest.

You are reminded 'that Intramural athletics are offered for your partlclf)atlon. When eough student• dealre to play a certain aport, It will be offered for their enloyment: Slgn·up and play In the three-man basketball league that will be on January 31, Wednesday, at the gym, at 3130 In the afternoon. Watch the paper for Information about future events.

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the faculty of MH:B since 1962. the "Dictionary of International Prior to that she taught Spanish Biography" is that each annual is­In Belton High School from 1947 to sue is dedicated to a head of state. 1962, and also taught in elemen- Copies of the royal edition of each tary schools, publication are housed in the pri·

Mrs. Henderson is active in civic vate libraries of rulers _the world and professional organizations, in- over. eluding both the Texas and Bell Included In the informAtion of County Historical groups, Daugh· each personality is a listing of ters of the Republic of Texas other biographical reference works Daughters of the American Revo: in which the individual is listed.

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P. =A-=G~_E...:4 _____ TH_._E_,_II_I' _____ ,_JII_~_~...:,~_flY_$_, _1,_.~~ How to Shake Bacteria Fever ~r SAYS U.S. AnORNEY GENERAL

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II America is o.,c~ Agpip -·~·~Jng A Safe and LaWful Society ••• "

Crime has stopped rising faster than the population and tht;! Nation is "crossing the line into the era of a crime decrease," U.S. Attorney General Richard G. Kleindienst said in a recent speech in Los Angeles. .

He said "America is once again becoming a safe and lawful society," despite the "tellers of fairy tales" who attempt to dis­credit crime statistics.

''Their eHort to discredit the crime statistics must be put In the same class as one of Aesop's best-known fables, ''The Fox and the Sour Grapes,' " he said.

'The myth-makers," he said, "have decided that since the figures do not bear out their point of view anymore, they will tell us that the figures are mistaken."

(During the first six months of 1972, serious crimes rose one percent - the smallest such increase for any comparable period in the past 12 years - and 72 major cities reported actual reduc­tions in crim~, as compared to 53 major cities with crime decreases in the comparable 1971 period and 34 cities in the 1970 period.)

Mr. Kleindienst said: ''There are a few subjects in American life that have been

more confused by fiction and fancy, fable and fairy tale. Crime Is, of course, a disturbing subject and like other problems in our society, it has its instant experts who seem to have trouble separa· ting the truth from the myth."

Citing the "myths and fables", Mr. Kleindienst said that for years "many people believe that the underworld was pretty much the creation of Hollywood, that it had little to do with crime in general, and that anyway, if left alone its members were doing a good job killing themselves off. ·

"I put this particular myth In the . category of the Beauty and the Beast, in which the Beast is not "!!lilY a Beast at all, and everything will come out happily in the end.

"The truth is that organized crime takes many billions of dollars out of the pockets of Americans every year in illegal book­making, loan sharking, theft of securities, cargo hijacking, ex­tortion, and illicit drugs."

Mr. Kleindienst added that. "from the beginning, this Ad­ministration believed that 'organized crime was alive and well and living off the fat of the land.

"Still the Nixon Administration mounted an all-out war against organized crime."

He said the result has been an 'enormous increase in in­dictments and convictions of racketeers. In 1971 we indicted three times more organized crime figures and convicted twice as many of them in 1968, the last year of the previous Administration. For the first time, in major cities throughout the country, we have been able to put the arm of the law on many of the top gang­land bosses. Officials who have been in our Criminal Division for many years say they cannot remember a time when such inroads have been made into the underworld.''

Calling the narcotics traHic "one of the most despicable fields of organized crime," he said It has d~yed the lives of thousands of Americans for profit.

"Here, too, he said, "a myth had been taking shape across the land. Some said that you couldn't enforce laws against narco­tics, and that the only way to meet this menace was to legalize it. Others said that some drugs were, after all, no more harmful than alcohol. Still others claim that drugs such as LSD were a posl­sltlve benefit to humanity.

It was a IIHie like the story of the ugly duckling, who really wasn't so ugly at all, If we would only wait for It to grow Into a swan.

He said that Nixon Administration did not "buy that story," and that the President gave drug enforcement a top priority: "Again, he enlisted all Federal enforcement agencies In the battle, and where necessary created new agencies to coordinate the total Federal effort."

Although, he said, the battle "is not yet won . . • we are on the offensive and the enemy Is on the defensive." He noted that longtime narcotics officials say there has never been a time when Federal efforts have been so effective a~alnst 9ru~ t_raffJ~~-ers. ·

Do Your OwP Mi~rtbo lbiqg By PAT ROBERTS due to exposure during two sem- it? . .

Have you ever had ari attack of. esters of zoology and botany. Now, at thlS pou~t ~ ~}ll<i !J.,ay~ do-it-you!"Self fever? Tlli~ com- Left alone, this infection. might just gone to the hbrary, c~eCKed plaint is not necessarily infectious, have become attenuated 1? du~ out a stack of books o~ rmcro~es­but can be virulent. The symptoms time, but then I enrolled m m1- and read about bacter1a. But m-· run the gamut from totally uni- crobiology. By the time school stead, I decided to grow my own. formed enthusiasm to slightly in- was out in December, I ~as Why not have ~y own lab? (Lab formed over-confidence. My attack thoroughly flooked by the tmy sounds prettentlous, but labora­was marked by the latter, with a world I had discovered under t~e tor~ was preposterous-. I had no complimentary dose of innocent microscope. But n~w , that I d equipment, grant~d.' . but then, all optimism. It began quitly enough found something I d1dn t even I ne~ded was _ster1hzmg apparatus, as just a low-grade harmless in- mind studying for, there were no nutnent med1a (food for germs), fection of curiosity' and interest more courses to take in the like petri dishes, stains, slides, and a in anything relating to biology science, so that was that. Or was microscope.

But lack of equipment should

B I H• h $ h I J d not be allowed to stop any self-8 ton 19 c 00. an respecting, aspiring do-it-your-self

ld I C microbiologist. I would impro-He Specia oncert vise. On hand was a somewhat an-ciet pressurer-canncr, temporarily

As Part of Charter Day minus gauge, gasket, and fitted lid, that would do for an autoclave

The 108 member, award-win- to Director Richard Crane. when repaired (to sterilize the ning Belton High School Band pre· "Third Suite Rondo," "Irving nutrient media and petri dishes I sented a special concert at Mary Berlin - A Symphonic Portrait," didn't have-; a small portable oven Hardin-Baylor College Friday eve- and selections by Mimor and Gar- would serve as a dry air sterilizer, ning as part of Charter Day and funkel were included in the pro- and baby food jars would sub­Dedication ceremonies at the col· gram. stitute for petri dishes, broken lege last weekend. Other presentations were "Ameri- pieces of glass for slides, and food

Most recent awards won by the ca the · Beautiful" by Dragon, a coloring for stains (food coloring?! group include first place in the Latin America flavor with "Maria- Now I needed culture media. marching contest at t~e Texas State chi," and selections from the Lacking the packaged nutrient Fair in Dallas. Also judged First movie, "Shaft." broth and agar bases, 1 thought Division in concert and sight read- that if Koch and Pasteur made ing recently, the Belton band has The concert closed wih th Alf~~! their own, then I would, too. Some-been named the Honor Band of Reed's collection of ymns, how. · Region 8 several times, according Sacred Suite." My first effort at improvising =::.:=-.:::.._::.=_.=.=..=_ _ __: ___ __:______________ microbe food was to boil one skin-

He said, "They tell us that a lot of crim~s ~re no~ reported ny chicken neck. This would have to the police, and the answer to that is that th1s IS nothmg new- worked had I not let it boil dry. some crimes have always gone unreported. . . Next, I boiled some more chicken,

"They tell us that the police are· trying to wh1ttle down the!r and watched it the whole time. (A figures in order. to win ":'ore Fe~eral fina!'ciql help, whE!reas If watched pot will boil - eventual-anybody were .going to tmker w1th the f1gures they ~~uld be ly.. · apt to inflate them to show more need for help. • . . I poured this broth into the

'They tell us that the police are not reportmg all the cnmes baby food jars and confidently set they encounter, and the answer to t~at is that the. spreadil"!g us; them in the dry air oven to be of data processing is actually increasmg the reportmg of crimes. sterilized. I am sure that all the

He said the Department of Justice is se7king to impr~':'e .the broth· that bobbled out onto the quality of the statistics, and LEAA Is supportmg such a pr~tect. he-ating' ·coil' and -splattered the

"As for the tellers of fairy tal~," he ul,d, ·~~~~lr ~~ ~ sides of the oven· was sterile. How­discredit the crime statistics must be put In the same clan as one ever, the unopened, ''sterile' jar of Aesop's best-known fables, 'the fox a~~ the f!our ~r~~.' " showed bacterial growth' in a few

He concluded, "I do not want to close by giving you th!'t 1m- days. That should- have ·told me pression that the war on crime has been won and that Americans soniethlng, "No,· 'I pr~bably con­can now rest secure. , tamh1ated the ·broth· accidentally."

"Crime is far higher than It should be, and this Administration So I boiled some soybeans, put -working with State and local authorities-will continue to do this broth In the jars, and put everything possible to reduce it. them Into the chlckenbroth colored

"But at the same time It Is a pl~,!~r• to re~rt t~at ~~e ~~ell· 1'Ns ~~"!~ It wor~ed: not crime wave Is no longer rising any faitll' than tltti populatliri. only what bubbled out was 1 can assure you the the Depart~~f't of Justice ~.nd the Nixon thoro!Jghly sterllzed; bu~ also what Administration will do everything t~ ~ that th~t p~11nt ·tre.nd · staye,d 1!1: WJtat ~tayt!d In was ~ure, tontlnues. · · , sterile carbon.

"America Is once again becoming a safe and lawfulaoclety. After ab•ing the house half a · day, I turned t~ other ~ays of

-···----MID-TEXAS .. PERSONNEL. AND __ .. ___ _ _______ GU IDANCE .. ASSOCIATION. ______ _

WHEN: February 15, 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. WHERE: Chapel, 9·1 0:00 a.m., Townaend Auditorium, 10-4:00. WHO: Mld·Texes Peraonnel and Guidance Association

(Counselor& from public achools in five (5) surrounding counties.)

MAIN SPEAKER:· John Lucas, Texas Education Agen,cy. 'No President," he said, "has ever given such forceful pub­lic leadenhlp to the peace oHicers of thlt ~ountry In ."l•~r baH~ L----.-.. -.-.-~!"', .~--------------...... against crime." ·

killing unwanted germs. · There was . some soy broth left, so I boiled this, and the jars, for 30 minutes~ That should have killed everything except sporeformlng bacteria (a survival thing In cer· taln microorganismS. and viruses. Into these jars I dumped broth and dou)lle-litrength gelatin, Intending to streak It with some acldophllus bacilli I just happened 'to · have around the house, imd Incubate It In my yogurt-maker. Way to gol Except - l(elatln takea a lo-o.ng time to sot up at room tempera· turo, never l(eta firm enough to strpnk, and worat of all, can"ot be Incubated becauao It meltl.

Nor, he said, hat any other Administration provided "any• , where near'' the financial asslatance to State and locel enforcement agencies that has been provided by this Administration.

He said, "The previous Administration provided $33 million of such funds. From ·969 to 1972 we provided a total of one-and· a-half billion dollars In auch funds, and our current 1973 budget Ia , •. $850 million .

''The truth It that these Pederally funded progremt All working, along with the dedicated eHortt of pollee agencies end

r.eace oHicers around the country. The crime weve that waa mount• ng higher and at an ever-faster rate In the 1960's Is now being

turned around. · 'In 1968, the laat yeara of the prevtoua Administration, crime

had gone up 17 percent. Every year alnce then, the Increased haa been slowing down. In 1971 we aaw only a 7 l?ercent Increase."

Citing another fable, he said, "Our critics, of courn, are tell• lng us that crime Is still going up, and that law enforcement muat be strengthened. Like Henny•Penny and her friend, they 1re ttlllng everyone that the sky Ia falling. ·

"lut the atory tellers are not quite up to dete • "We are now at the point of atopplng the crime lncreaae that

began In tho early 1960'a. Wo are croulng the line Into the era of a crimo decreaae.

"Naturally the fable·makera will not let that go by. They aay, 'Yea, but violent crime haa atill been Increasing.' They do not say that violent crlmo Ia tm extremely amoll proportion of total crime -loll than 15 percent- and amall volume change& are therefore reflected in tho lnrge percentnge chengea. And they alae say, "Yea, but crime Ia lncrooslno In auburban and rural areas." They do not aay that thla Ia atilt a amoll part of total crlmo and that It waa the lawle111neaa of the big cltlea which waa the cause of such alarm.''

Mr. Kleindienst 11ld that because the flaurea do not be1r out the polnt·of·vlew of the "myth·makera," they now aay that the flgurea ~ro mistaken,

I Will getting discouraged, Stln, thoro wore these 'sterile' jars with the growth In them. I amonred some of thiR on n ploco of lllasa and went for my mloroacopo, won, actually, I had to Improvise a bit

· thoro, too, Now look ctoaoly and I'll show you what I 1nw through my mpgnlfylng glnaa -. Say, I just thought of aomothlnJZ. Anton von Loeuwonhock, father of ml· croblolo&tY, ·marla his own lenaoa. Do you aupposo. • ••

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HOMI WORK OPPORTUNITIII

lox 292

Ruldoao, New Mexico 88145

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MARY HARDIN-BAYLOR COLLEGE, BELTON, TEXAS, FEBRUARY 12, 1973 No. 14

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Chesltlr" N. Stork, aw•rded Honor•ry Memlienhlp In the MU Eta let• Fr•ternlty," Ch•rter D•y d the C•ndlellght Dinner. Also I"!!C8J,rlltil .. thls honor. Was- PreSident--lobby E.· Parker.

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lonnie llrntt, president of the Ienior Cl111 '731 loin• with her cl111 ·In ll"fllng "Up With the Purple.''

MH-B Receives Gift from Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Sanderford

The 11Ift of a part Interest ln a modern11e our pro11ram1 to meet Hamilton County ranch to Mary tho neod1 of today'• student•." Hardin-Baylor College from Mr. Tho Sanderford• flrat mot at

Mary Hardln·Baylcr, Mrl, Sandor· and Mr1. T, E. Sanderford la an· ford 11 an MHB 11raduato and for· nouncod b)' Dr. Bobby E. Parker, mor toaohor thoro, Sanderford, af· MHB president. tor graduatlnl from Baylor Unlver·

Tho Sandorforda, who have been alty, founded the journallam de· activo 1upportora of tho oollo1e partment with tho late Dr. Wll· for many yoara, aro donating a llam H. Vann and tau11ht journal· flvo por cent lntcroat ln tholr 31,· l1m at MHB from 19119 to 1938, Ho OIO.acro ranch In Hamilton Coun· Ia now prominent In Central Tex· ty, Thl1 ro1ultod In an lmmodlato a• bualno•• and olvlo affairs. 11Ift of $'7,087.41 to MHB and a Mr. and Mr1. Sanderford rooolv· total of $80,111111.'10 ovor a porlod of ed tho Prolldent'a Award II). 18'70 years. for tholr 1upport of MHO. ·1n ad·

11Wo aro very 11ratoful to Mr. dltlon, Mr. Sanderford In 1~118 l'O· and Mra. Snndorlord for this won· calved tho Favorite Son:kn·LaW Dl, CAMPI ILL WIA V

dorful oxpro11lon of •upport," said do1l11nat1on of tho Mtm Alumnae -----------­Dr, Parker. 11Throullh tho yean A••oolatlon, MHB'I Community their 111v1n11 of both tlmo and fin· Collo11o Award ln 196'7, and mo1t anolal holp to Mary Uardln·Daylor rooontly an Award of Exceptional Collogo hal holpod Ul expand and Achlcvomont' fa•om MilD.

Frlend•hlp Ia a relatlon•hlp with loti of hopo,

Lovo ll a rolatlon•hlp wlth that hopo achlovcd,

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Fall '72 Honor Roll Names 150 Students

The fall 1972 honor roll at Mary Johnson, Sherry Jurca, Joyce Ann Hardin-Baylor College as announced Moore, Kay McCarthy, Gladys Me­by Dr. William J. Anderson, vice Neill, Druane Rogers, Frederick president of academic affairs. One Russel, Charlotte Simpson, Melba hundred and fifty students are in- Fountain Smith, Sammy Joe Un· eluded. Under a 4.0 system, stu- berhagen, Brenda Vanderveer, Rod­dents must have ,at least a 3.5 ger Weems, Judi S. White, Barbara grade point average. Of the 150, Wohleb, and Cindy Wong. 34 had 4.0 grade point average, Thirty-six Killeen residents on which is the highest possible. · the honor roll are Janet Aurentz,

Th li t · 1 d 15 f h Marietta Bangert, Thomas Barrow, e s me u ~ . res men, Janet Cowan, Pauline Dixon, Sus-

15 sophomores, 47 JUmors, 66 sen- an Dougl s Ma ha D · La · d · 1 if' d . 1 a , rs ram, ura 10rs, an s1x c ass 1e as speCla E Fr dd' Fl d J J students vans, e 1e oy r., oanne . · . Gotcher, Ardis Sue Hallmark, Joan

Bel~on honor students . mclude D. Heard, Leslie Marie Heath, 'Bar­Francls Atmar, Rhonda Brock, Re- bara House Joan Kai er Arllgb becca Carroll, Mrs. Charyl Dragoo, Keeney Stanle Lobs s ' D tte Victor Feazell, Darla Herrington, Lowecy Carol/ M ttJ' R~d B~tt~ Jett, Margare~ ~eal ~igh, Merrell: Barbara D~ ~iler,1

Jane VlcJ:U McCl~re, CJu:lStine Rin!ler, Nixon, Bobbie Myers, Karin McKee, Jaruc~ Mar1e Schiller, Marilyn James McNaughton, Delores Ortiz, Sch~l~t, Susan S~ultz, Ann Speer, Frederick Schubert, James Skin· C~lS~m~ S~~ffyh J~ ThKio~klas Steuw· ner, Linda Kay Stone, Bonnie Jean ar • ar a ro • n r ey t- Thornton Teresa Scott Tum ley and Jan Stewart Ward. Bruce Vasbinder, Helen Wils:!:

Temple residents are Lorene Donald E. Wood, Ray Thomas Amos, Linda Barta, Bonnie Bone, Woodruff and Martha Fagan Yod-

. Bonita Braun, Carolyn Britton, Lin- ler. da Chaffin, Mary Ann Davis, Mrs. Other area students are; From Vanny Bolsins, Peggy Dooley, Dav- Fort Hood, Dorothy Baxter, Thea­id. D. Dunn, Ann Jayne Dysart, nita Lewis, and Rosemary Schmlll. Lois Ann Engholm, Katherine Ful~ Copperas . Cove, Margaret Boyle . ·;royce· Gola;';Dori&' Haiiltimer,: D0iiha"7Dfew, Zen'atda'Grabam; and

. Teresa Hill, Patricia Hock, Virginia Suzanne Turner. Harker Heights, Ann Rose Brown, Harley·Davidson, Laura Tipa. Lampasas, Mindy Boyd,

W H ld Norma Gail Woire. Waco, Gerald ray 0 s Caldwell, Ann Elaine Reeves, Kar· en Reinke, Johnny Sue Reynolds. ·ch e . ct· e Bartlett, Ruth Canava, Jeanette

Olr lnlc Henry, Shirley Janke. Lott, Ken-neth Driska, Ann Hoelscher. MC­Gregor, Cynthia Farmer, Dorinda

Dr. J. Campbell Wray of Fort Joy Rost. Moody, Jerry Hargrove. Worth, former professor of voice Little River, Pamela Kay Miller. at Mary Hardin-Baylor College, is Cameron, Laura Pimpler. Rogers, conducting a choral clinic for the Doris Ann Prater. Salado, Sherry adult choir. at the First Baptist Ann Jackson, Mrs. Jean Dupuy Tar­Church. The clinic begins Wedncs- button. Gatesville, Francis Terrell, day and will continue through Sat- Dorothy Woodard, and Austin, urday, according to Larry Putman, Lanu Bunch, minister of music of the First Baptist Church.

On Sunday, Dr. Wray will pro· sont the choir in a spacial program at the momlng worship, and a spo. oial program at '7 p.m. The public II Invited to tho ovenlni program

'Prince Charming' Contest Begins

which will bo tho re11ular worship Valentino's Day Is more than service. just a slntod day sot aside In .re·

Dr. Wroy hold tho position of spoct for lovers, On tho Mar)' Coordinator of public presentation• Hardln·Baylor campus, Valentine's In tho departments of music, art Day has become the otflolal day and drama at MHB, whore ho re· of reign for "Prince Charming." celvod tho Favorite Son-tn-Lnw Sponsored by Uistorloal PhUa Award ln 1968. He Is married to Society, the contest Is dosltnod to tho former Camollo Savior, trad· ralao mono)' for tho March of Dim· unto of MHD and Boll County na- oa, Members of tho society serve aa tlve, campaign mana~rors for onoh camp.

He 11 a traduate of Howard us entry, Entries aro •elected from Payne Colle11o, Southwoatorn Bop· tho campua faculty. All votlnl 11 tilt Theolo11loal Somlnary, South· dono by coin and ahould be con· wo•t Toxa• State Collelo and hold• trlbuted to tho Individual oampalp bachelor of art•, bachelor of mu· mannaora. 1lo, bachelor of 1aorod mualo and This year's entries include 1uell ma1tor of arts and doctorate de· poraonnlltloa na Amoroua Allen· 11reoa, Ho studied at tho American bau11h, Bluahini Baker, Heartthrob Con•orvatory, Wostmlnl•tor Choir Uorvoy, Hubba Uubba Hilla, Jack· School and tho Collo11o of Flno pot Jernigan, Madcap Moroor and Arta at tho Unlvar•lty of Toxa1. Tempting Thomas. He hal atudlod advanood voioo with Announcement of this year'• win· Thoma• MacBurnoy In . Chicago nor wlll bo mado In Chapel, Tuo•· and Robert Lawrence In Phlladol· dny. Tho now winner will rolp phln. throughout We~ •. -Fob. 14, Last

llo hn• tau11ht In Uoward Payne, yoar'• winner wa(:s· 1· Charlo• Pat· Unlvor~lty of Toxaa, Southwoatorn. toraon wlth Mr.·.' tllr Dalton Dapt11t Seminary, ha• been choir namod •• flrat r\'~ . 'i.r,· director In sovoa•al ohurohoa, and So, lot .out •and· V.~,"for: .yOur ha• boon a clinician, conductor Prlnoa Charming, You nove~ow and oonto•t judgo, - It may pay off. . , · \; ,

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PAGE2 THE BELLS FEBRUARY 12, 1973

Bare Bones Budget: Story of Bombs vs. Books

By Ron Hendren

WASHINGTON - With the unveiling of President Nixon's "bare bones budget" as Senate Minority Leader Hugh D. Scott (R-Pa.) termed it, the stage has been set for one of the most his­toric and far·reaching confrontations between Congress and the White House in recent years. Eight pages of the President's budget message were filled with the names of programs he plans to reduce or terminate. They read like a history book of Democratic administrations since Roosevelt, for the programs Mr. Nixon plans to scrap are primarily legacies from the New Deal, Fair Deal, New Frontier and Great Society of Roosevelt, Truman, Kennedy and Johnson.

According to the President's view, people programs (such as federal grants to elementary and secondary school libraries) should not be funded by federal tax dollars. As these programs are phased out, his projected savings grow from $6.5 billion in the current fiscal year to $21.7 billion in Fiscal Year 1975.

.. At the same time, however, the President has called for an increase of $4.7 billion in the Defense Department budget, an amount which exceeds the total budget of the Office of Education.

While Mr. Nixon's message of frugality was delivered in the spirit of holding down taxes, interest rates and inflation - goals to which every politician and citizen aspire - that spirit was tain­ted with the harsh reality that Mr. Nixon, places domestic prob­lems low on his totem pole of priorities.

A keystone in the White House strategy for winning the bud­get fight will be to secure the support of the nation's governors, mayors and other state and local elected officials. The golden carrot on the end of Mr. Nixon's stick is the promise of greatly increased revenue sharing, and already some of the country's most influential mayors are publicly licking their chops. The President apparently believes that with their support and by hold­ing down taxes, he will be able to carry the day against Congress and the specia I interest groups which benefits from federal dom­estic spending.

What Congress will attempt to show, on the other hand, is that those special interest groups include the poor, the elderly, children in public schools - indeed, nearly all Americans. For ex­ample, the proposal to phase out library grants has already been termed "a disaster for our schools, which would set elementary library ... development back teri years," by the president of the American Association of School Librarians. In plainer language, those grants have for years meant that children and adults in communities all across the land have had ready access to books. Without the aid, the story will rapidly change. Without books, what happens to education?

And federal grants to libraries represent just one of the my­riad of programs which the President proposes to end. Whether he will be able to have it his way depends in large part upon the determination of Congress to fulfill its Constitutional mandate to allocate federal funds. And if Congress' will in the months ahead is no stronger than it has been in the past, the picture will be grim indeed. ·

------o----Burke-Hartke - Who Needs It?

Who is - or who are Burke·H.artke? Don't know? You prob­ably will in the next few months when Congress tackles an Issue of vital Importance to all Americans.

Sen. Vance Hartke (D-Ind.) and Rep. James Burke (D·Mass.) are the authors ·of a bill introduced during the last session of Congress. It never came to a vote, but the measure is sure to be reintroduced in the 93rd Congress.

The Chamber of Commerce of the United States believes passage of the legislation would have serious adverse effects on the U, S. economy, create additional unemployment in this coun­ty and cripple world trade and investment flow.

The Nation Chamber feels this is so because Burke·Hartke provisions would sharply reduce U. S. foreign trade and invest· ment by imposing quotas on most Imports. A whole series of private and governmentel studies have shown conclusively that foreign trade and overseas Investments expand U. S. employment opportunities.

If the United St11tes Imposes quotas on Imports, do we expect foreign countries to sit back end 11dmlre our trading policies? Hardly! Such en Import quot11 Imposition would provoke ret111i11· tlon th11t would severely cut bsck U. S. exports,

And then whst h11ppens to the persons whose lobs ere de­pendent on the export trsde? You guessed right - they would be out of work.

Burke·HIIrtke - Who needs It? -------o------Needed: A National Energy Polley

Does the United St11tes need 11 n11tlonal energy policy? The Chsmber of Commerce of the United St11tes 11nswers In

the afflrm11tlve and the reuon Is almple. Summed up, It Ia the prenlng need for an edequete supply of energy to meet v11rled demands on our complelC economy.

The supply and 11vallabllity of basic fuels auch ea oil, cosl and natural gea Is, of course, of paramount Importance but the n11tlon11l energy Issue Ia a m11ny·slded one cutting 11croas auch are11s as tax111lon, tranaportlltlon, lntern11tlon111 considerations, land uae, environment end n11tlonal aecurlty.

Coordination end hermony 11re the keya to the development of e nallon11l energy policy since the many faceta of the energy problem are now treated In an uncoordinated and often confllc· tlng manner.

National policy decisions affecting thla country'• energy sup· ply muat be coordinated. Public policy In areea which can affect energy supply must be conaldered with a view toward meeting our nature! e11"gy demands.

A netlonal energy policy will alae require the conaolldatlon of energy-related functlom of the Executive Branch. At leaat nine of the 11 Cabinet Departmcmta preaently are eKerclllng varying degreea of regulation• over tho energy lnduatrlea. Prealdent Nlxon'a propoaed conaolldatlon of energy-related function• Into a

, Department of Natural Raaourcea Ia aimed at Introducing more coordinated and effective governmantal performance,

lan't II time we devoted more energy to aolvlng our national energy problema?

Editor's Mail February 2nd, 1973

Mrs. Betty Barn~s. Alumni Director Mary Hardin-Baylor College. Belton, Texas Dear Mrs. Barnes:

The February 1st Edition of the Belton Journal has just arrived with the notations of the building of the "Student Center Wall of Fame" on the Campus.

While I cannot qualify for fame, at least I would like to purchase a brick as a former student of "Baylor Female College."

I took violin lessions at Baylor during the years 1904-1910 inclu· sive. These were years when Dr. W. A. Wilson was President, Miss Clara Bixby was Dean, or whatever the head of woman was, and my violin teachers were successively Mr. Karl Meiners, Julian Paul Blitz, (later Director of the Houston Sym­phony Orchestra), Miss Elizabeth Bratton and a Miss Geiscke. In 1907 1 was made a member of the Royal Academia Society, and play­ed DeBeriot Concertos at the an­nual student concerts for two or three years. So far as I am aware, I was the first male student to at­tend Baylor - unable to get any . form or" certificate or recognizane of my work because the Charter said "Girls Only." · It took some doing to even get to take lessions thet;e cin the part of my parents.

My Father, James S. Coats, own· ed and operated the Belton Steam Laundry from 1898 to 1920, and we. did the laundry for the Col­lege, This probably constituted an entree for me.

I am now 78, practiced Osteo­pathic Medicine in Tyler for 50 years, have served on tho above Board for the past cl~htccn years.

I regularly subscribe to the Bel· ton Journal, but the old names arc rapidly dlsnppcnrlng from the !lies of the paper. I have always loved Belton and Beylor, and spent a wonderful boyhood there.

Please let me know the price of a brick and indicate a suitable In· Rcrlpllon to be Placed upon It, and I will promptly subscribe.

Yours truly, Dr. Howard R. Coats

The ponnlty for bigamy Is two mothora·ln·lnw.

RIIIARCH MATIRIALI ALL TOPJCI

Involvement Hurts? Recently, a survey of approximately 200 college newspapers

showed tl-]at more and more administrators are becoming weary of the proBlems created by campus newspapers.

During the '60's, an increasing use of obscenities in school­sponsored publications angered faculty members in many colleges. In the past year, however, campus publications have decreased the use of such obscenities considerably, but have instead become involved in many controversial subjects.

Today's college newspaper is carrying an increasing number of controversial advertisements for alcoholic beverages, draft coun­seling and contraceptives. Today's college newspaper is taking a strong stand against the war, evaluating faculty and course offer­ings, demanding increased student participation in governing the colleges, advocating student rights and other causes and candidly treating sexual subjects. In other words, today's college newspaper is getting involved.

In the turbulent years of the '60's, students were strongly rebelling against the so called "establishment." However, many times the students had no solutions for the problems to which they were opposed. Perhaps the students realized that all of their rebelling was actually solving nothing, so their dissent took a dif­ferent shape.

The students of today are no less rebellious than they were several years ago; they are still deeply troubled over conditions existing in the world. Today's students are no longer simply dis­playing their discontent, they are now taking action to help solve some of the evils of the world.

Since some of the more urgent problems are also controver­sial, the student, in his involvement, takes an interest in the con­troversies. When the students take an interest in these subjects or problems, so do the campus publications. The collegiate press merely reflects the ideas and attitudes of the students. If the stu­dents are interested in controversial problems, then the college publications try to interest them by printing articles about these problems.

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LET'S WORK TOGETHER - People In business, labor and goY• ernment must work together If we are to achieve the hlgheat standard of living for all, says the new chairman of the Na· tlonal A11oclatlon of Manufacturer~, Burl F. Rayn11, "We hive nothing to consume that we have not first produced " he ex· plains, "VIrtually all the neceultles of life are contained ·In the outpouring of mlll1 and factorlea. We ere depen~ent on thla output for clothes, means of transportation, food end houalng." This buslne11 contribution to our way of life naecls to be understood more widely by the public, educator• and members of government. Mlaconceptlons must be corrected. Mr. Rayntl 111ld that areas of agreement In labor relatione should also be Identified, ao that areas of dlaagreement can be minimized. These candid prapauls by an lnduatrlal leader should be welcamed by all segment• of the American r.ubllc 111 logical moves In helping our country reach Its 1ocla , eco­nomic and educational goela without Hlf·defeatlng bickering between 1peclal lntere1t aroupa, -- ·--------------·--. ···-··-

-·-··-· MID·TEXAS .PERSONNEL AND--.--.. -_, ...... GU IDANCE .. ASSOCIATION ... --···

WHEN1 February 15, 9100 a.m. to ot,oo p.m. WHERE1 Chapel, 9·1 o,oo a.m., Towmond Auditorium, 1 0·4,00. WH01 Mld·Tel<aa .Personnel and Guidance. Auoclatlon

(Counaelora from public achoola In five (5) 1urroundlng countlea.)

MAIN SPEAI<ER1 John Lucaa, Texaa Education Agency.

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Sond for )'our deaorlpLivo, up. to-dnto, 12D·Pa!lo, mall ordor cntn1u11 of 8,800 quality re· aearch papers, lncloae 1.00 to cover pattaat and htndlln1, Publlehed weekly at Mary Herdln·Btylor College 11 1 part of

the atudent activity. Return poatage gu~rentHd. IIIIARCH UNLIMITID Entered at tl'it Poet Office In Belton, TeJCea, 11 aecond-clau

119 Glenrock Ave,, lultt 201 matter under the Act of March 3, 1873, '-~:,:,":;,~:4 C:~~:.'/:4 Editor .... _ ......... : .... _, __ ,_, _____ .. .,_,,_ ................ - ... Suatn Keller

"Wa nood 11 loon I •aloaman" A11latant. Edlton .............. ·--·- Sheila Rlch~rdaon, Vonlo Hopkin• ._ _________ ..,., Bualne11 Manager---·-----.. --.. --.. ··-··-- Janice Andrewa

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FEBRUARY 12, 1973

MH-B Netters Blank Aggies

The Mary Hardin.Baylor College freshman tennis team defm•ted the Texas A&M freshman team in straight sets, 6-0 Monday in a tour· nament in Goodman Gym. The MHB men's team won both singles and doubles.

In singles, Reij o Tumola defeat­ed Hal Harkey 6·3, 6·1; Roberto Trogola defeated Alan White 6-2, 6·3, Craig Gold defeated Gary Creekmoore 6-1, 6·0, and Melvin Collazo defeated Ted Landry 6-0, 6-4.

In doubles, Gold and Trogola de­feated Harkey and White 6·2, 6-0; Tumola and Collazo defeated Lan­dry and Creekmoore 6·2, 6..0.

Help to Dig Up England's Past

THE BELLS PAGE 3

Baylor Moare ( Montreal Ex· • pos), at baseball clinic.

Dr. Hills supervises unloading of ·dirt for MH·B's new baseball field. Students are urgently invited to

help in archaeological excavations in England this summer. Deadline

· for applications is April 1. City center redevelopment, new

road-building programs and rapid· ly changing land use are threaten· ing the disappearance of prehis· toric graves, Iron.age settlements, Roman villas, fascinating relics of mediaeval towns, all over Britain.

American students free from mid-May, and with previous ar·

· chaeological experience, are invit· ed to join an international team on a dig of the important. Anglo.Sax· on site at Spong Hill where the 1973 excevation hopes to find new evidence of the early pagan settle· ments. Experienced helpers will receive free board for helping with this important work. Similar help is also required on work on a me· diaeval manor near Chester.

Other students without experi­ence are invited to join the British Archaeology Seminar at Lincoln College, Oxford, organized by the Association for Cultural Exchange. Six academic credit can be earned from p-articipating in this lo:w·cost program which ends by three

Kenny Boswell (New York Mets), aHended baseball clin· ic.

Ecology -Everyone's Business

by MARY LEE THOMPSON .

Seniors Borirlie Ernst, Beth Chlldre11, and Margot Rebovlch lead the Senior procenlon In the traditional Midnight March, Charter Dey.

weeks' partlelpation on digs in dif· Beautiful countrysides don't ferent parts of England and Scot· just happen. They come into land. . . , cloom only with tender loving care.

Ienior Jo Ann Watton honon 1 mole rtaldent In Johneon Dorm by glvl .. him 1 lighted can• die, Alao pictured are roaldent1 U·r) Mtrtln Atklnaon ond Mlko khuot1e. This woo the flret time In MH•It hlatory thtt the men'• derm wa1 Included In the traditional Midnight MtNh.

Compliments of

BRITT D.RUG CO.

112 E. Central· - Phane 939-2682

Find tho coat of froodam Burled In tho ground. "Mother Earth" will awnllow

you Ln)' your body down,

---o--·· Tho relative humidity In tho

nvoraao homo drop11 to about 111 par aont during winter month• whon tho heatlnll •v•tom 11 opor· ntlnll atoadll)'. ll'or both health nnd oomfort, a homo haatocl to 'JO daaroel 1hould havo a relatlvo humidity of about 811 par oont.

These tnclude the AssociatiOn 5 A cast In point is the natural beau­own mesolithlc dig on the island ty of Tuscnrnwns county In Ohio. of Oronsay In the Hebrides which Its rolling hills, forests, flat lands last summer was. visited by Queen and lal~es were marred by old Elizabeth, Prince Charles and Prln· trees, run down buildings and junk cess Anne. Cost, Inclusive of yards, Even historical sites, Trans.Atlantlc travel by scheduled churches and schools were in need jet, Is $790. . of paint.

With now for further details to . 'ro one woman - state extension Inn Lawson, !i39 West 112th Street, home economist Alga Weaver -New York, N. Y. 10025. It was an impossible situation.

---'o Something had to be done about I Wouldn't Do That! it. So, she drew up a two.yenr How many times have you heard plan that involved the whole com­

that said? People do not all nl· munlty as well as the rc·establlsh­ways nsreo an everything, even on mcnt or Arbor Day (generally ob· lltllo things, and how o[ten do wo served In April ot• May) thnt has say, nnd how onsy it is to say, "I been forgotten in many slates. wouldn't do that," or, "I wouldn't ller plan, and nn lB·Paso booklet sn~ that," when wo have seen some· on Arbor Day progrnms which aho one do something, or hea1·d some· wt·ote, sparked an Impressive list one say something that we think Is of accomplishments. Over 0,000 out of place, or not just like we students turned out to wot•k on thlnlt wo would have done, or snld, Arbor Dny projects along with under tho circumstances. cluhs, church groups and hundreds

Onco a brother did aomathlnl! of concerned citizens. Evoryono that another brother thought wns pitched ln. nat rl11ht and tho otho1· brothel' Tho result was 5,0001 trees said, "You know, I would not hnvo plnntod, 10 miles of cnnnl land dono that If I had boon you," to clont•od fol' hiking trnlns, camp which tho first brother ropllod, grounds devotopccl, roadside fences "1 do not question for one minute nnd buildings painted, and trash what you think you would not have hauled away. Over n two.yoar per-dono, but, you know, you arc not lad mora than so small hhlhWII:i rna," - as much us to any, "You picnic nrans have been developed might bo right, but I do not think ami nro bolnd malntnlnecl. 1 waa wrong," Tho operation, duhbotl TRUE

This, of oourao, may havo novcr (far Tmcurnwna lhn·al U1•bnn En· boon our oxpcrlcnco, but to 1omo hanoomont) haa boon a succou and It hal been, and is I'Da1, wblch evoryono ha& benof!Uod from the monns that It Ia, or could bo true bcnuUCicntlon project. Mlsa Wonv· with you and mo. This npplleR to or won an nwnrd f1•om the National juat about ovoa·y aron uf mar llvos Aasoolntlon of l~xton&lon llomo and whon wo hnvo dono tho vory EconomiRta In recognition of hor buMt wo can, or tho boat wo know out.Htandlnll work on tho projaot. how .to do under tho clroumatnncca, Tho cxtonalan aorvlco, wllloh 11 wa nocd not be 1urprlaod U aomo· tho cduontlonnl nrm of tho U. a. ono orltlolaol u• for dolnll what Dopnrtmont of Agrlculturo, htl wo have dono and nt tho aamo tlmo urgocl other oountrloa to follow tho aomoane olio orltlolaoa ua for not praaram, too. Eoonolg)' Ia aval')'-dolng mora than wo havo. dono. bod)''& bualnoaa,

PAGE4 THE BELLS FEBRUARY 12, 1973

Presidential Sports Awards Dr. Hills, in the department of least 50 activity sessions, within

Health and Physical Education, a period of four months. Con­extends an invitation to the stu- cessions have been made only in dents and faculty at Mary Har- sports where seasons may be din-Baylor to participate in the short or access to facilities limi­Presidential Sports Award. ted. In such cases, 50 hours of

Awards may be won in the fol- activity are required, but they lowing sports: may be accomplished in fewer

Archery, Backpacking, Badmin- than 50 sessions. ton, Biathlon, Bicycling, Bowling, Although it is possible to qauli­Canoe·kayak, Climbing, Equitation, fy for an award in much less than Fencing, Figure skating, Golf, four months, spreading the re­Handball, Ice skating, Jogging, quired activity over a longer per· Judo, Karate, Orienteering, Penta- iod of time than is absolutely thlon, Racquetball, Rowing, Rug. necessary will yield greater bene­by, Skiing, Softball, Swimming, fits and enjoyment for most per­Table tennis, Team handball, Ten· sons. nis, Volleyball, Water skiing. If your favorite sport does not

The qualifying standards for place reasonable demands on your the Presidential Sports Award cardiorespiratory system (heart have been developed in coopera- and lungs), it is recommended that tion with and approved by the you supplement participation with appropriate sports governing bod- a physical fitness program involv­ies and/or coaches' associations. ing activities such as swimming, The standards are designed to as- jogging, cycling, etc.

• .

sure regularity of participation If you are interested in trying and an investment of time and for this award, please see Dr. effort conducive to physical fit- Hills in Goodman Gymnasium and ness for those eighteen years or obtain the appropriate forms. older. The basic principle gov-

Senior Terry Pa"~ai participates in tl1e traditional Candleliahting Ceremony, Charter Day.

of participation, spread over at If you cannot do great things, Faith is seeing ligllt Witb Your erning qualification is 50 hours do small things in a great way. heart, when all Y0 '1l see \\>jtb Your Pi------------------------· eyes is blackness.

BSU CALENDAR OF EVENTS - 1973 Feb. 16-18

Mar. 9-11 Apr. 20-22

May 21-30 Aug. 15-20

State leadership Training Conference -Fort Worth

Missions Conference - Fort Worth International Student Conference -

Palestine, Texas Mexico Mission Trip - Valle Hermoso, Mexico Glorieta Student Week - Glorieta, New Mexico

L. T. C. T. L. C.

What?: leadership Training Conference Whom?: Those who want to give .•• learn true tender

loving care. When?: February 16, 17, and 18th. Where?: Dallas How?: Bus, we leave 4.00 p.m. Friday, Feb. 16th, behind

Hardy. Cost?: $10.00 Room

$ 2.00 Transportation. Approximately: $6.00 Food

SUBTRACT: $5.00 (reservation fee (due Feb. 14th by 5:00). If you have been wondering what the BSU Is, and how you can participate or lust what to have 1 great time with some Christians.

THIS IS ITI (For more lnfromatlon contact Richard Mangum

BSU Office, 939-5811, Ext. 32

SPRING INTRAMURAL$ FOR MEN A full program of Intramural sports will be offered this

spring by the Health and Physical Education Department. This Is the proposed schedule of activities offered. Dr. Hills, who will direct these activities, hopes the men on campus will par· tlclpate In and end enloy the following activltles1 Feb. 14 - Three-man basketball competition Feb. 21 - Paddleball tournament

Singles, doubles, and coed competition Feb. 28 - Table tennis

Double elimination tournament Mar. 7 - Shuffleboard

Double elimination, doubles and coed Mar. 14 - Bowlln9.

Men 1 and ladles' tournament at same time Two pereon teams - on handicap

Mar. 22 - Badminton Doublee and elngles, double elimination

Mar. 28 - Golf No handicap - 1 8 holes

Apr 4 - Swimming Meet and Water Polo Boya and glrle swimming meet together Men'e water polo competition

Apr. 11 - Tenol• Slnglee and Doubles competition

Apr. 25 - Softball - Pick up teams and play May 2 - Softball - Faculty, atudent contest,

You are reminded that Intramural athletlca are offered for your partlciP.atlon. When eough atudenta dealro to play a certain aport, It will be offered for their enloyment. Slgn·up and play In the three-man baaketball league that will be on January 31, Wednesday, at the gym, at 3130 In the afternoon. Watch the paper for Information about future events.

EASTER PAGEANT Plans are being made for the Easter Pageant. The casting com­mittee is meeting and people are beging considered for various Parts. If you are interested in a role or being on a committee, Please fill out this form and drop it in the campus mailbox:

I

EASTER PAGEANT MH-B, Box 343 Campus

Name --------... -------------Address ______ .:_ ______ Phone -------

:lassification -----------------------

NOTICE - SENIORSI Applications for degrees must be· filed by March 2 for stu·

~ents graduating In May or August. Flll out application In Reg· •strar's office and pay $1 5.00 fee in Business offflce at the time Of application is made. · .

The Graduate Record Examination or the National Teachers Examination is -required of all graduates. Packets may be picked up In the Registrar's offlcce or the Dean of Students office.

The NTE Will be given at MH·BC on April 7-packet should be mailed bY March 8.

The GRE Will be given at MH-BC on April 28-packet should be mailed by March 14. .

May graduates who are taking correspondence courses to fulfill graduation requirements must have courses completed and finals taken by May 1.

r•·----------·--·--·-----~ ~ GO AHEAD. ~ ~

J~~r~:c~t\1 li I'M A COUPON. I Just because In your 11 to 21 years of middle•clau American auburbia upbringing, you've been 10 overexpoaed to coupona that you could atuH them· down some newapaperman'• eaophaaua, vou think I'm •nother run•of·the•mlll, houaewlfey coupon. Well, I luat happen to be worth

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A BIG PIZZA A SMALL PIZZA

I j4t the PI••• Hut where thev ••rve more 1111111 thllllllllyene I n the worltl, even Lultl L1111n1 ever In Oenee,) So the.re.

I And If you can't divorce vouraelf from Your adol11cent hana•upa, and actually c1 ut me, • coupon, out and u1e me, you Ole,

Ha h1 h1,

· Ttmlllt ICIIIttn t 110 Thtmten "'"' 11011••• l•neler

I . 771·1 111 116 .. 111

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;'

MARY HARDIN·BAYLOR COLLEGE, BELTON, TEXAS, FEBRUARY 19, 1973 No. 15

Preliminary Judges Named for Pageant Twenty-five contestants - each semi.finalists which will be an­

with her eyes on the crown worn nounced during Saturday evening's by Debbie Odom, Miss Mary Har- performance. The ten semi-final­din-Baylor 1972 - will be narrow- ists will then compete Saturday ed to 10 semi-finalists by a panel night with five finalists being chos­of five preliminary night judges~ en from the semi-finalists and Miss

Contestants will compete March Mary Hardin.Baylor 1973 chosen 8 and 9 in evening gown, swimsuit, Saturday night from the five fin­and talent competitions. Points alists. will be scored determining the ten

Course in Food Services Offered

An opportunity to qualify as a professional in food service is be­ing offered under a new program announced by Mary Hardin-Bay. lor College. A special course will begin March 5 for persons current­ly employed as supervisors in food service for such institutions as schools, hospitals and by industrial

Serving on the preliminary nights five-member judging panel are Mrs. Karen Whitson from Huntsville. She is the Assistant Dean of Students at Sam Houston State University and was recently named to the Outstanding Young Women of America.

Mrs. Betty Thrasher of Gatesville is presently the distributor for Vanda Beauty Counselor Products for the central and west Texas areas. She has directed the Miss Gatesville Pageant for five years.

firms, according to Mrs. Beverly Mrs. Jane Christie is from Bar-Carolyn Tice, director, shows the Queen's ·robe to Dianll Roberson, Awards Chairman (center), F. Hammond, registered dietitian ker Heights. A graduate of Mary and Dee Doughty (right). Awnds for the new 1973 Miss Hary Hardin-Baylor include the in MH-B's Home Economics De- Hardin-Baylor with a degree in official crown, robe, trophy and full tuition scholanhip along with a bouquet of roses. A· partment. speech, Mrs. Christie has judged wards will also be given to the remaining four finalists along with a special presentation to The course involves 90 hours of numerous pageants of varied types Miss Congeniality, Preliminary Swimsuit winner and Preliminary Talent winner. classroom instruction and 36 weeks throughout the area.

of supervised practical experience. . .

It's lou I h to Be a Jud I e 'Prince Allenbaug'h' ~e~~i::ati~~e: ~t:n f~:::· ~u:.:~: pl~~ !a~~~~r:::t~~s:it~!al~: , . . · fted applicants. ~· ~nee at Temple J~mor College. He

Ta•-es ca·¥e' ted Spa• Graduates will receive a certifi- IS also an established newspaper-. ~ . . .. 'I cate and will be eligible for mem- man and freelance writer •

. , ..... ............. . .. .. .. , ... T.h•--'rt. All .. Lov•lv , . , .· ... : .. ,_ ,; ""·~,:-.... .. : .. ;.:..:.'~··· ........ :...;.,"'"J..•:~~ .... x ..... '---:ship in •'-e Stat- and .National .. Mr.l)an Acree of Killeen. is prea-• ·' ........ ~- ~·· •• ·: .. ;-~ •• ':1,. ~-~ '" ~- •• •·' ..... '"'"He ·nm•"yoUf'""iitOmaeli' ;'.':' ·, Ho~ ital In~~itution .. ~i and Educa. enUy ·the· iiew·directOr•for KTON

F1ve prominent judges from the M1ss Texas Pageant in 1970 why not fill hiS can?" was one P • • radio station Be is president of varied fields of Interest will aerv_, and 1971 and Executive Director of the many campaign slogans tiona! Food Service Society (HIE- the Metro M~dia Club Be Is also on a panel to select the new Miss in 1968 and 1969. He is presently which 'paved a victory path for FSS), the professional organization a member of the Kille~n Exchange Mary Hardin-Baylor March 10. a member of ita Board of Trustees Amorous "Warren" Allenbaugh in of the food service supervisors. Club and Killeen Jaycees

They will score the points which and Board of Directors. the recent Prince Charming ·con· Classroom training will be offer. • will determine the winner as the Mrs. Peggy McMahon is present- test. ed Monday. afternoon from 2:00 to lovely young ladles compete in eve· ly serving her fourth consecutive Announced February 13 in 5:00 p.m. m room 210 Wells Sei­ning gown, swimsuit and talent di· year on the Board of Directors of Chapel, Prince Warren was es- ence Building on the MHB campus. visions. the Miss Texas Scholarship Pag- corted to the front of the "cas- Basic cost of the course is $80.00,

The personable girl selected Miaa cant. She has accompanied three tle" by members of Historical payable with enrollment applies­Mary Hardin-Baylor at the climax Miss Texas title holders to the Phila Society, spOnsor of the con· tions now available from Mrs. Ham­

NTE to· Be·· Given April 7

of the pageant to be staged In the Miss America Pageant as the Offl· test. There he tcceived the offi. mond, 817•939·5811• extension 28. The National Teacher Examina­Mabee Student Center under spon· cial State Chaperone. cial bouquet of. suckers, official Applicants should be employed tlon wlll be administered on sorship of Mary Hardin-Baylor Col· Mr. George Petrek is the Execu- "Prince Charmine • 1973" banner, in a supervisory capacity in food April 7 1973 at Mary Hardin­lege will gain the right to continue tlve Director of the 1973 Miss Tex- and official crown. The elevated service, possess a high school di· Baylor College which has been a climb toward added honors in as Pageant. He Ia a member of and responsible position of Firat ploma or equivalent, or obtain a designated as a test center. the Miss Texas Pageant to be con· the Board of Directors and cur· Runner-Up went to Blushing Bark- letter of recommendation from the According to Dr. Dorothy Mc­ducted during .July at Fort Worth. rent manager of Miss Texas 1972, or with the understanding that he dietary consultant service, the fa· Connell, Dean of Students, many

The winner of the Miss Texas Mae Beth Cormany. He was the would assume tho title of Prince cllity where they are employed in college seniors preparing to teach Pageant will carry the state ban· Executive Director of tho 1972 Miss Charming should Amorous Allen- food service. and teachers applying for certi-nor to the national Miss America Texas Pageant. bough fail to complete his reign, flcation licensure or those seek· Pa11oant in Atlantic City, N. J., to Mrs. Carolyn Hames Is the Exe- Hubba Hubba Hilla was nam~d MH-B Lengthens lng po~ltiona in' school systems seck the' crown and ramo as tho cutlve Secretary of thu Miss Texas Second Runner-Up. which encourage or require the now Miss America. Scholarship Corporation, and Ia Voting for the contest was by Lunch Hour NTE wlll be taking the teats. In

Sorvlnll on tho final night five· presently serving her fifth conse· monetary donation. Members of Leisure has como at last to the addition, tho designation of Har· mombor panel of judges will be: eutlvc year. A member of the Historical Phila Society served as college luncheon. Mary Hardin· dy Dining Hall as a toat center

Mr. D. Don Magness Ia Chairman Board of Directors, she Ia one of campaign manaeera and wore re- Baylor College today allows stu· for these examinations will lllvo of the Board of the Miss Texas the official chaperones for Miss aponslble for securing votes. Con. dents and faculty up to one-and- prospective teachers in this area Corporation. Jlo was President of Texas. trlbutlons totalled over $140.00 a-half hours to dine ln Hardy an opportunity to compare their

Mr. Richard LnBoon la the Asso· with all procoods given to tho Dining Hall on tho quiet 101-acre performance on tho examinations elate Producer of tho Miss Texas March of Dimes. campus here, with candidates throughout tho Scholarship Pageant and currently An annual event, the Prlnco. "Wo arc oxpcrlmonllng with all country who take tho test, Dr. Rorvos on tho Board of Directors. Charming Contest proved to bo kinds of ways to enhance learn- McConnell said.

J. W. Williams Receives Honorary Memberthip, Alumni

Mr. J. W. Wllllams of Bolton was given honorary membership In tho Alumni and Ex-students Asaoclntlon at Mary Hardln·Bny· lor College during the rocont Charter Day scrvlcca.

Tho honor Is 111vcn annually to aomcono who has boon outstnnd· in11 In loyalty nnd aupport or Mary Jlardln·Bnylor.

Mr. Wllllams, Suporvlsot• of Malntonanoc, fll'Rt onmc to Mll·D in 1090, aorvlng until 1042. Jlo rotut·nod aftct• tho war In 1040 anct 111111 boon· employed at tho cotlogo over slnco. lUK wlfo, Nn· dlno, and dauGhter, .Tanlco Wll· llams Autry,nt•o both gt•nduntos of MU-D and hl11 son, Donoso, attend· od tho achool.

Mra. Wllllnma Is a teacher In tho I<llloon public scbools.

Uo also has producod both the Miss not only sorvlceablo but enllght- lng at Mli·B, and lf a tranquil Last year approximately 120,­Fort Worth and Miss White Settle· nlng, as won. luncheon will holp, then that's ooo candidates took tho oxamlna· mont Pageants. Congratulations, Prince Amor- what we'll offer'' said Dr. Doro- tlons which arc designed to 118•

Tickets tor tho nnnual affair ous Allonbnught Slncoro and fond· thy McConnell, do!ln of students. soss cognltlvo knowledge and un­may ho purchnsorl In tho cotlogo ost wlRhos for a full and success- Sho said tho longer lunch ls bo. dorstandlng In pt•ofosslonal odu­hookstoro beginning Fob. 26. tul year's roig111 lnll trlod In response to student cntlon, general otlucntlon and aub·

Mrs. Coker Given Alumni Award Mrs. Dorothy Dashor Coker,

9737 Illgh Vlstn, Dallas, has hoon honored with tho Outatandlnll Alumni Award of Mnry Hnrdln· Baylor Collogo,

Mt•a, Coker 111 n format• pt•o&l· dent of the Dnllna Mll·B Club and hnK orsnnlzod othot• Mll·ll groups tm· other cltloR. Sho was nradun· tod ft•om Mll·U In 1042 nnd Is a format• lll'O&Idont of tho Collogo Alumnno Association,

'l'ho award Willi prosontod by tho Alumni nntl Ex-studontll All· soclatlon or Mll·ll dm•lnll cnmllo• lighting sot•vlcos 1111 part of tho Mrs. Coko1• IK an acllvo mom.· 120-yonr-old coltoac's C)lartot• Day, bot• of tho l'nrks City Dnptlst colobrntod rooonUy. Tho awnrd IH Chm·ch and 111 activo In a num· tho hlghout 111von by tho Alumni bot• or UultnH clvlc and commun· AII&Oclntlon. lty onumlzaztlona,

BUIIIIOStlons. joct·flold apoclnllzatlon. Tho oX• Luncheon ls served over n DO· amlnntlons, which arc prepared

mlnuto porlotl on Monday, Wed· nnd ndmlnlstorod by Educational nosday and· Friday. On Tuesdny 'l'ostlng Sorvlco of p1·1nceton New nnd Thursday, things m·o n little Jersey, nro limited to naaos~ment tighter - only one·and·a·qunrtor of those aspects of teacher edt., hours for lunch. cntlon thnt nro vnlldly nm\ ro-

o llnbly moasul'od by well construe· God's Gift: ted pnpor·and·pencll tests.

Onco I wus lost on 11 down· Uullctlns of Information de· wnrd wny, scribing rcgl.fill•ntlon procedures

A vulco from henvon was 111111 contalnlns UtlSIHtl'ntlon fonnR hum•tl to any, IIH well llfl Hllllllllo tcHt quoatloiUI

.TOHUH t!nmo., llo IIvoti nntl mny bo obtnlnod ft•om Dl', McCon· dlod, noll OL' tllroctly fL·om tho NnUonal

A1ul In It nil, llu WIIR ea·uclflml. •ronchorH J~xnmlnntlona, Eduoa· Why, yuu IINic, did He tllo Uonnl 'J'osUng Sot•vlco, Box 011,

for mo? l1l'lncolon, Now Jorsey 000,0,

PAGE2 THE BELLS FEBRUARY 19, 1973

Face to Face, and the Other Computer Just Blinked

By Ron Hendren WASHINGTON -When members of the House of Represen­

tatives first used their electronic voting machine the other day they were as delighted (and unruly) as a bunch of kids with ~ new toy.

In a way the scene was sad. For years now, the executive branch has had more banks of computers on hand than it could keep bu~y, an~ thousa.nds of ':xperts to operate them. Congress, meanv.:~ale, wa:ted untd 1973 jUst. to modernize its voting, much less uhhze computer energy to assast in analyzing legislative prob­lems. Indeed, .•t was only recently that the congressional payroll was computenzed - a tool ever maior private industries have employed for years. . Thus it is no surprise that Congress has been left in the wings an the balance of power struggle between the executive and legis­la~ive branches. Not only h~ve members of Congress lacked the wall to play a forceful role an government, iust as important they have lacked the wherewithal!.

Now, at last, a ~odest. effort is being made to change the score. Before electronac votmg for example it took the better part of an hour iust to get all 435 congre~smen on the House floor and get their roll call votes recorded. Now the task can be accomplished in fifteen minutes. '

In addition, plans are in the works to catalogue by computer the !?regress of .the more than 20,000 pieces of legislation which are antroduced m Congress each year. Thus, members and their sta~fs could readil~ locate a bill and determine its status. Hard as at may be to believe, such a determination was not always easy to mak7 in the past, and in any event, was almost always time­consummg. Those who know say the new system will be opera­tive later this month. . Eveh so, .thi~ modest effort to move legislators into the twen-

taeth century as JUSt a start toward combatting the overall crisis C.ongress faces. As one wag put it, the Defense Department takes eaght months, banks of computers and thousands of people to put together their budget, while the House Armed Services Com­~ittee ha~ four months, ~o computers and 38 employees to figure at out. Wath .those odds, at'~ no wonder the committees ioin more often than faght the agencaes whose spending they are obligated to oversee.

. The co~frontation over the budget now brewing between Presadent N 1 xon ,and. Congress will provide an up-to-date test, both of Congress wall and of its ways and means to exercise control of the purse. So far, they are eye to eye; Congress has threatened (rather emptily), and if Richard Nixon has blinked no­body claims to have seen it.

------0-----

Letter to Editor Dear Susan:

We have just experienced one of the greatest Charter Days Mary Hardin-Baylor has ever had, and much of its success should be cre­dited to the wonderful cooperation and assistance of our entire college family. I would like for readers of The Bells to know how grateful the Alumni and Ex·Students Asso­ciation is for every one of you who shared in making it a memor­able occasion.

Our deepest gratitude goes to the Administrative Staff, the Fac­ulty, the Department of Fiscal Af­fairs, the A.R.A. Slater Food Serv­ices, the Department of Communi­cations, Music, Health and Physi­cal Education, and Home Econom­ics, the Housekeeping and Mainte­nance Departments, the Senior, Junior, Sophomore and Freshman classes, Royal Academia, Historical Phila and Mu Eta Beta for many long hours and lots of hard work.

Dr. Miles Honored Dr. Minnie C. Miles, Head of

the Department of Management at the University of Alabama, has been honored with the Outstand­ing Alumni Award of Mary Har­din-Baylor College.

Dr. Miles' address is Box 1522, Tuscaloosa. She was graduated from MH-B in 1936.

The award was presented by the Alumni and Ex-Students As­sociation of MH-B during candle­lighting services as part of the 128-year-old college's Charter Day, celebrated recently. The award is the highest given by the Alumni Association.

Dr. Miles was named to the faculty of MH-B while still a stu­dent, taught for a number of years after graduation, and has remained active in MH·B affairs while contributing service to sev­eral national organizations con­cerned with the role of profes­sional women.

James Knight

MH-B - CTC Grad Commissioned

Second Lieutenant James B. Knight, son of Mr. and

Mrs. A. J. Knight of 120 Burle­son St., Rockdale, Tex., has been commissioned a second lieutenant in· the U. S. Air Force upon gradu­---01--- / ation from the School of Military Sciences for Officers af Lackland AFB, Tex.

Joseph Arnold

MH-B Graduate Commissioned

Second Lieutenant

Lieutenant Knight, selected through competitive examination for attendance at the school, is being assigned to Columbus AFB, Miss., for pilot training.

A 1966 graduate of Rockdale High School, he received degrees in aviation from Central Texas Col­lege and Mary Hardin-Baylor Col­lege.

The Perfect Church I think that I shall never see

A <:burch that's all it ought to bel

A church whose members never stray

Beyond the straight and narrow way!

A church that has no empty pews No-Fault Liability Insurance Possible in 1973

Numbers of Alums and Exes who were here for Charter Day ex­pressed to us their pleasure over the warm and friendly atmosphere Joseph W. Arnold, son of Mr. Whose pastor never sings the on campus. · They were especially and Mrs. 0. J. Arnold Jr. of Rt. 1, blues! happy with the hospitable way you Holland, Tex.; has been commis-

By Ron Hendren · ·students welcomed them and made stoned a second lieutenant in the A church 'whose deacons always deak WASHINGTON - Since the mid-1971 furor, very little has them feel "at home." Actually, U. S. Air Force upon graduation

been heard concerning the push for no-fault automobile liability theyd jukst discovered what we al- from the School of Military Sci- and none ·is proud and all insurance. And with good reason: lawyers who have profitted rea Y new - that you are the ences for Officers at Lackland are meek! for years from the present liability Insurance system have waged greatest We are proud of you AFB, Tex. Where gossipers never peddle lies an effective and thorough campaign against no-fault In state legis- ~ B delighted that you are at Lieutenant Arnold, selected Or make complaints and criticize! latures across the county and, for that matter, in Congress itself. · · through competitive examination Where all arc lowly, sweet However, 1973 may prove different. Sincerely for attendance at the school, is be- and kind

· States are finally beginning to see the overwhelming benefits Virginia Herndon Keith ing assigned to Webb AFB, Tex., And all to others faults are bllndl of no-fault insurance. In Puerto Rico, for example, where no-fault President, MH-B Alumni for pilot training. Such perfect churches there has been in effect for more than two years, auto liability insur- and Ex-Students Ass'n A 1967 graduate of Salado (Tex.) may be ance now costs each car owner a mere $35 per year. High School, he received his B.A. But none of them arc known

This little island, a commonwealth of the United States, Is 11111...1 T L 11 degree in 1972 from Mary Hardin- to mel ·not known either for Its lnnovatlveness or for marked Industrious- •~ever 00 ate at Baylor College, Belton, Tex. But still we'll work and ness - everything seems to take longer here. Yet, Puerto Rico Dinner Playhouse The lieutenant's wife, Rebecca, pray and plan pioneered In the no-fault concept, and today death claims for fun- In Austin is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. To make our church the era! expenses are paid usually within 48 hours and disability pay- Marvin E. llamblin of Rt. 3, Bel- best we cant ments are normally received within two weeks. Eddie Bracken will star in one ton. ' - Selected

Under Puerto Rico's compulsory Insurance plan (policies can't of the most successful comedies FM;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ · be c11ncelled), 90 cents of every premium dollar Is available for of the New York stage during the

benefits, comp11red with as little as 45 cents on the doll11r In many 1960's, entitled "Never Too Late," st11tes. Moreover, Puerto Rico's plan pays all medical and hospital when it opened at the Country expenses for accident victims, es well liS up to $5,000 for loss of Dinner Playhouse, Austin on Wed­limbs or sight 11nd up to $15,000 In survivors' benefits. nosday, Feb. 14, after a public

Here in the slates, Massachusetts h11s led the way, and while preview, Tuesday, Feb. 13. results In thet stele havt' been less dramatic then In Puerto Rico This comedy by Sumner Arthur (mostly because the Mass11chusetts concept Is conslderebly wetered Lon11 details the hilarious up­down), liability lnsurence rr~tes heve nonetheless been lowered heavals that come into the lives m11rkedly and on more then one occeslon. of an average small-town family

Yet, no-feut has floundered In state leglsletures all 11cross when a beluted Blessed Event the country end has felled to receive more than "study" stetus In looms for them 20 years after Congress. Why? The lawyers who st11nd to gain the most from any now Bundle from Heaven the present sue-the-other-guy system have declared oil-out war might bo expected, against no-fault proposals. And they h11ve the money It tt~kes to Brnckcn (Lm•ry Lambert) will win. In Mlchlgt~n, during the haot of the no-fault controversy In be seen ns n slxtylsh husbnnd who 1971, the trial lawyers spent neerly $250,000 to defet~t no-fault. Is dovnstnted nt the news that

Their determination Is understandt~ble, but hardly commend- he will no longer hnve ponce and eble. The everago trial le.wyer In a llt~bllitY, suit will receive any- qulot In his homo, ns well ns un­where from 25 to 50 percent of the "t11ko ' - whatever the court disputed powe1• to hnve hl11 whims ewards his client In dt~mr~ges. Thus $50,000 In de.m11ges, which sntlsCiod, nnd thnt ho will soon Is not an unusu11lly high figure In llebillty suits, will net the wln- hnve to shn1·e his kingly throne nlng attorney anywhere from $12,000 to $25,000 In fees. As with nn lmpo•·lously demandlnll for the Injured client, II will likely be years before he receives nncl KCIUnlllng lnfnnt.

TO: GRADUATING SENIORS FROM: DR. BOBBY E. PARKER, PRESIDENT RE: POLICY REGARDING PARTICIPATION IN

1.

2.

3.

4.

COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES

All grodu11tes of M11ry Hardin-Baylor College are expected to participate In May or August Commencement exercises unless other errangements have been m11de. Permission to graduate In Absentia for reason of moving from the area,

Illness, or hardship amergoncles may be granted upon the receipt of a petition In writing to the Vice President of Academic Affairs by May 1 for May gredu11tes, and ·August 1 for August graduates. lndlvldu111s will not be permitted to participate In Com· mencement exercises prior to the completion of degree requirements. December graduates will participate In Commencement exercises the following Mt~y, however, their degree& will be posted as of the December completion dete. Dales of 1973 Commencement exercise&: MAY - Baccaleureote, Friday, May 1 B, 8:00 p.m.

Commencement, S11turdey, May 19, 10:30 a.m. AUGUST - No Baccolt~ureate

Commencem~~ont, S11turday, August 1 1, 10:30 a.m. any money et 11ll, because "appeal" Is the name of the game In "Novel' 'l'uo I.nte" Is coming to llt~blllty suits. Austin with tho erodenllnls ef ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=='

No-fault Is o relt~tlvoly simple answer: Let et~ch driver's lmvln!l l'lm to pnckod houses In llt~blllty Insurance p11y for his own personal Injuries Incurred In ew Ym·k fo1• 20 months, from tho on automobile accident. Thus, In oil but the most severe Injuries fnll of 1002 to tho sprln!l of (usu11lly 70 percont or more disability), lloblllly lltlgr~tlon would 10015. ColumnlHt Waller Winchell bo done tJwny with, tho nmounts of damages sought would be cnllod IL "uno of tho funnloHt more realistic, high lawyer fees would be by-passed, long court shows on OI'OIIllwny," Time mann· proceedings and the Incumbent costs would be ellmlnoted, llt~blll- zhw clllHOI'IhtHI It 1111 .,A pulve•·lz­ty lnaunmce premiums would oo down slgnlflct~ntly, and damaoe ln~ly funny cunwcly," nnd tho Now payments would be received promptly. Yurt' 'rlmnH "" "A mo1•ry, hub·

With ell those points In lis fnvor, no-fault liability Insurance blh111 fnrco thnt ~PI'(llldH joy," Ia certain to mt~ke algnlflct~nt QDina In tho months ahead. And If "Nuvm· 'l'nn t.nto" plnyH nlnhtly the atetes do not move toward ent~ctlng their own no-fault system, oxcopt Mundny, with mntlneoH Congre11 Ia aura to do eo on tho fedoral level - and 1973 may Snllll'liny 111111 SmH\uy, For ro•er· be the year. vuUnnH cn\1, O:lfJ.ft021.

--·~·--····.~---.... --~·-~·-....... -"'i·i ' ·I' ,:f .:.I .'' ·, 1t.•~ . . ., ., ..•.. !t~

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Publlahed weekly at Mary Hordln·Baylor College 11 a part of the atudent acllvlly, Return jloatogo guarenteed,

Entered at the Post Office In Belton, Texa1, 11 aecond-c:la11 matter under the Act of March· 3, 1873. ·

editor ---···----···--········-· ·····-···-··-··························----· Suaan Keller Aulatant Editor• ··-········-··········· Sheila Rlchardaon, Vonle Hopkins Bualnen Menager -----·····-··-·-······-···--·--·-·- Janice Andrew•

~~--~---

MAKE. YOUR OWN PEACE , The signing of a ceaseflre does not end our work for peace

In VIetnam. You can take positive action. within the realm of your own conscience, to alleviate suffering our country has caused and to prevent its recurrence. ·

The American Friends Service Committee Is substantially expanding Its strong, well-established programs of peace ac­tion and aid to North and South Vietnam. This Is action of extraordinary scope for this Quaker organization which has worked Impartially for peace since World War I.

AFSC aid In the Vietnam War began In 1965 with medical assistance to clv11lans. The Service Committee has supplied penicillin for war sufferers in NLF controlled areas and deliv· ered four Installments of surgical supplies to North Vietnam.

In South Vietnam, the AFSC has provided medical care for Inmates of the Quang Ngal Province prison, developed a pro-. gram for refugee children and conducted a widely recognized prosthetics and rehabilitation program for war Injured civilians.

In the area of peace action. the American Friends Service Committee has been calling for peace In South VIetnam since 1954. Currently, the AFSC continues to press for release of· more than 200,000 civilian political prisoners In Thleu's jails. II is challenging new·and disguised forms of Intervention such as replacement of soldiers with 10,000 U.S. civilian advisors. Ills also supporting a campaign to stop further development and production of anti-personnel weapons.

AFSC programs are working today. We have budgeted over $1,000,000 tor peace action and. war relief this year. We now want to increase this by af least another $1,000,000. If you want to help make peace In this way, send the coupon.

r- -------·----... :ACT: ~~~i.l~H~~ : I FOR WAR RELIEF AND PEACE ACTION I I AMERICAN FRIENDS SEAVICECOMMR'TEE * I I A Quaker Organization, 160 N. 15th St., Philadelphia, PA 19102 1 I 0 I enclose to be used In your program of I 1 peace action and war relief In North and South Vietnam. 1 1 0 :.:~~~~o help the campaign In my area. Please send lnfor• 1

I Nam I I Addre I I City State 71 I L2·02:-Q0~128 Contributions are deductible for Federalll'\tome tax purposes. .J ---------------

FEBRUARY 19, 1973 THE BELLS PAGE 3

1 'North I South Vietnam Fund for War Relief and Peace Action"

A million dollar campaign to more than double its aid to civil­ian war sufferers in Vietnam and its work for a lasting peace in In­dochina was announced this week by the American Friends Service Committee.

Designated the '-North/South Vietnam Fund for War Relief and Peace Action," the campaign open­ed January 21.

A major early phase of the cam­paign is directed to the university communities across the nation, ac­cording to Wallace Collett, board chairman of the AFSC.

"University young people," said Collett, "and the faculties are deeply concerned over the ramifi­cations of this war. The theme of the campaign is 'Make Your Own Peace.'

Vietnam at the time of the Geneva agreement. Since then it has car­ried out unceasing peace educa­tion and action efforts that have included teach-ins, drafts and mili· tary counselling, the 1969 "March Against Death" in Washington, D.C., and the development of print­ed and audiovisual material re­vealing the facts about the war and U. S. involvement often buried under the propaganda of the gov­ernments involved.

Funds raised for the million­dollar campaign will go to support the initiation of new AFSC war re­lief programs in all parts of Viet­nam and for domestic and interna­tional work for peace in Indochina.

Founded in 1917, the AFSC is dedicated to the search for non­violent solutions to human prob­lems. With projects in 18 coun-

"We have found," Collet add- tries in addition to the· United d, "that many young people are States, it has a worldwide staff of seeking a way to do something on men and women of many races, re­their own volition that can make ligions and nationalities. a difference. Their support of ----AFSC's programs has been identi­fied by many of them as one way to make a difference to the thou­sands of victims of this war."

The AFSC will more than double its efforts in the year ahead to re­spond to the accumulated misery of the Indochinese people.

"It is equally important," said Collett, "that Americans keep well­informed about the role of the United States in Vietnam. Many of the involvements of our coun­try in Vietnam have taken place with the American people unaware of the sweeping and tragic nature

Job Announcements for All Students CARE St • U of those involvements.'' epping p The AFSC operates a prosthetics Aid to, Vietnamese and rehabilitation center at Quang Winter and . Summer On the heels of the cease-fire Ngai, north of Saigon, which fits announcement, CARE Headquart- maimed civilian victims of the war

with artificial arms and legs. Med-

"The eomputer is 'ouly a tool-there will always be room for lueompetent hu· man Interference."

student Jobs .,8 Europe· ers today cabled its Director in d . 1 u h Vietnam to proceed with finaliz- ical an surgtca supp es ave

' . ing previously-prepared proposals been provided to North and South RESEARCH MATERIALS ·Thousands of .. paying student money for travelling around Eu- 'for ·vastly expanding the agency's Vietnam by AFSC over a period of A L L T 0 p 1 c 5

jobs are again available in Europe rope. The Student Overseas Serv- relief and reconstruction aid for several years, and the ·AFSC's Send for your descriptive, up­for this . winter and next summer. ices (SOS), a Luxembourg student destititute refugees and other war spokesmen have been prominent to-date, 128-page, mail order Winter jobs are available now in organization, will obtain a job, a victims. in efforts to convince the United catalog of 3,300 quality re­Swiss, German, Austrian and work permit, visa, and any other Also, under discussion with Viet- States to get out of Vietnam, con- search papers. Enclose 1.00 to French ski resorts, restaurants and necessary working papers required nam government officials are pro- ferring In Hanoi, Paris, Saigon, and cover postage and handling. hotels. Jobs for next summer are for any college student who ap- posals to establish medical services Washington, D. C. with representa-avallable throughout Europe in re- plies early enough. for the sick and Injured and to re- tives of all warring factions. RESEARCH UNLIMITED sorts, restaurants, hotels, hospitals, Any student may obtain applies- settle displaced families in new AFSC's peace action role in the 519 Glenrock. Ave., Suite 203 factories, offices, shops and on tlon forms, job listings and descrip- communities or in their former vii- United States has dated from 1954 LOS ANGELES, CALIF; 90024

when the Board of Directors warn- (213) 477-8474 • 477-5493 farms for those wh.o like outdoor tions, and the SOS Handbook on lages that now lie in ruins. Such d 1 t U S 1 1 t 1 "We need 8

local salesman" work. Most of the jobs are located earning a trip to Europe by send- aid would include repair and con- e;;;;;;;a;;;g;;;a;;;n;;;s;;;;;;;;. ;;;;";;;;;n;;;vo;;;;v;;;e;;;m;;;e;;;n;;;;;;;n-d~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;~~ in Switzerland, France, Germany lng their name, address, educa- structlon of houses, schools and • and Spain, but selected positions tional Institution, and $1 (for ad- roads, with tho people themselves are available in other countries. dressing, handling a.nd postage) to helping to do the building, and Standard wages arc always paid, either Placement Office, Student the provision of work-equipment and free room and board are pro- Overseas Services, 22 Ave. de la for farmers, fishermen and artisans vidod with most of the jobs. Llberte, Luxembourg, Eu1•ope, or In small industries, so that they

This simply means that any col- to SOS, Box 5173, Santa Barbara, con support themselves and their lege student willing to work can California 93108. Applications for families. earn a trip to Europe. A few wlntel' jobs In Europe should be CARE fins operated in South weeks work at a paying job In sent In Immediately, nnd all job ap- Vietnam slnco 1954, when it was Europe more than pays for tho pllcatlons should bo sent oa1·iy the first outside agency to enter new round-trip winter youth fare enough to allow tho SOS Placement the country after the Geneva truco. to Europe and a few more weeks Office amply time tD process job "Americans have tho challenge on the job earns mo1·o than enough anan~omonts and working papers. and opportunity of helping to build

VOLLEYBALL TOURNAMENT On Friday and Saturday, February 23-24, there will be a

High School Girls Invitational Volleyball Tournement In Good­men Gfm. Over 20 girls volleyball teams from throughout the stete o Texas will beo competing. The tournament Is being apon· sored by Phi Epsilon Mu and official& will be students from MH·B. The first game begins at 8:00 Friday morning end ere scheduled through Saturday afternoon. There will be no ed· mlsalon cherge end everyone Is Invited to attend,

NOTICI SINIORSI

Applications for degrees must be filed by March 2 for stu· dents graduating In May or Auguat. Fill out eppllc&tlon In Reg· latrar'a office and pay $15.00 fee In Buslneaa offflco at the time of application Ia mede.

Tho Graduato Record ExDmlnatlon or the Netlonal Toechera Examination Ia required of all graduate&. Pockets may be picked up In the Reglstrer'a offlcce or the Dean of Students office.

The NTE will be given at MH·BC o:l April 7-pllcket should be mailed by Merch B.

The GRE will be given at MH-BC on April 28-packot ahould ba mailed by Mmh 14.

May graduatea who are tDklng corraapondence courses to fulfill gradu&tlon requirements muat havet couraen complotad and finals tDkon by May 1,

tho conditions in which peace can survive," Frank L. Gofflo, CARE Executive Director, said in an ap· peal for public support. "Whatever .governments do, thoro is an urg­ent need for direct, people-to-peo­ple assistance for millions of tho homolt1ss, hungry and sick. Al· though our p1•osont work centers In South Vietnam, CARE 11tnnt111 rendy to 11ond nld wherever It 111 ncodorl nnd requested throughout Jndo-Chlna."

For thoso who wish to holp, con· trlbutlons may be Rent to CARE, Vlotnnm Fund, Dcpm•tmont 3, 100 North Akm•tl, Dallus, Toxns 75201.

PADDLEBALL TOURNAMENT A paddleball tournament will be held this week. Compe·

tltlon will be divided Into singles, doubles; and coeducational. If you, you and a partner, or you and your favorite person of the opposite sex would like to play, please come by the gym and slgn·up by 5:00 Tuesday, Feb. 20.

.All& •smoke~s WhOp n to qu1t some 11: .

Canvou throw awe.~ that pack rltht now7 It'll not CUNy, Is It?

In 20 ycnrs, nfter 146,ooo more cignl"ettes, yo\1 think It'll going to be easier?

J)on't kid yourself. Quit now, You'll never act a chnncc like thla nanln.

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PAGE4 THE BELLS FEBRUARY 19, 1973

· Chinese archaeologists have uncovered a tomb 2,1 00 years old and found in it the remarkably preserved remains of the wife of a Chinese aristocrat, and more than 1,000 artifacts in excellent condition. February SCIENCE DIGEST repprts the 50-year-old woman's body was discovered in an ancient burial pit sealed within six coffins along with a full complement of food, clothing ·and utensils for use in the next life. The excellent condition of the artifacts, many of which might still be· used, and the well pre­served state of the body, prompted Chinese archaeologists to label the tomb as the greatest single find of the century.

------o------Researchers now are working with whales, dolphins and

porpoises to see if they can be taught to "talk" with people as well as work with them. The sea mammals have been used for some time by the Navy for performing a number of undersea tasks that include the retrieval of test weapons, rescuing frogmen in trouble, and acting as underwater messengers for Sealab II researchers. The February SCIENCE DIGEST reports that because of their ability to go much deeper than men and because they can be trained to do a variety of underwater chores, these crea­tures are favored as more economical and practical than the com­plicated operations of men and equipment. But now some re­searchers claim that several porpoises have been taught to vocalize recognizable word sounds. Most scientists snort, but they are listening.

The New Campus Activism By RALPH NADER

Student activism has come a long way from that day in February 1960 when four Bible-carrymg black students sat down at a lunch counter in North Carolina and re­fused to move until served. They and the thousands of white and black civil rights workers who fol­lowed their example ushered in a decade of campus social concern about issues such a peace, ecology, and women's rights. This surge of activism affected colleges and uni­versities themselves. At numerous campuses dress codes and parietal rules have been abandoned; courses are more diversified; and, in many schools, students have won a voice in policy matters.

Despite some successes, student activities are plagued by recurring problems. Students' lives suffer from gaping discontinuities: Activi­ties follow the academic cycle. Campus - led voter registration drives, tutorial programs for the poor, and environmental projects are interrupted by examination per-

and concentrates on issues within its immediate area.

In Vermont, tor example, stu­dents and staff have published exposes on the ski industry, Blue Cross health insurance, and are in the process of creating a state­wide lobby. The Western Massa­chusetts PffiG has sued a large utility. In 1\'Iinnesota MPRIG took action on more than 60 projects during its first year of operation. The Missouri PmG drafted a new consumer code to protect poor people in St. Louis. The fledgling New Jersey PffiG, with only two staff members, led a fight against a transportation bond issue which ignored mass transit needs. In each case student researchers gathered data and prepared re­ports, and when necessary, the professional staff drafted new leg islation or filed suits. In some states, within a few months of their establishment, PffiGs be­came important representatives of citizen interests.

Pm.Gs were not legal or would endanger universities tax status. However, favorable opilllons by state attorneys general and ap­proval of tax-exempt status by the Internal Revenue Service eli­minated these concerns. Today in state schools such as the Uni­versity of Minnesota, Oregon State. the University of Massachusetts. and Rutgers and in private schools such as St. Louis Univer­sity, Syracuse, Rice, and WUliams, students and PffiG professionals are working projects designed to make government responsive, pre­serve the environment, protect the consumer, and guarantee equal opportunity to all.

For more information concern­ing PmGs, write to Citizens Ac­tion Group, 2000 P Street, N. w ... Washington, D. C. 20036.

Consumers Need to Know

By LEE LANDIS

~

'PSST. .~ HO\AlABOLIT A LITTLE ACTION ?

... · iods and too often ended by sum· mer vacations. Whoever heard of a July peace demonstration?

When the PffiG concept first was proposed on campus, skeptics wondered whether students would support the program or whether regents or boards of trustees would grant their approval. Both questions repeatedly · have been answered yes. Others feared that

Would it surprise you to learn that there are now over 75 differ­ent government agencies that look after citizen rights? That's how many are listed in the U. S. Gov­ernment's "Guide To Federal Con­sumer Services." So, it would seem that what we need is more education, not more 'legislation to

ACI10N Is a growing movement of volunteers out to help people help themselves. It's the Peace Corp!J and VISTA, helping peeple overseas and rlgl}t down the street. Please don't CMWl under a rock. Get into ACTION today. ~"·"•'\ \ aoo .• ftA •8580 TOLL q'l .. _.. . FREE. ~.

BSU CALENDAR OF EVENTS - 1973 Mar. 9-11 Apr. 20-22

May 21-30 Aug. 15-20

Missions Conference - Fort Worth International Student Conference -

Palestine, Texas Mexico Mission Trip - Valle Hermosa, Mexico Glorieta Student Week - Glorieta, New Mexico

SPRING INTRAMURAL$ FOR MEN · A full program of Intramural sports will be offered this

spring by the Health end Physical Education Department. This Is the proposed schedule of activities offered. Dr. Hilla, who will direct these activities, hopes the men on campus will par· tlclpate In end end enjoy the following activities: Feb. 21 - Paddleball tournament

Singles, doubles, and coed competition ' Feb. 28 - Table tennis

Double elimination tournament Mar. 7 - Shuffleboard

Double elimination, doubles end coed Mar. 14 - Bowlin~

Men a and lad lea' tournament at same time Two person teams - on handicap

Mar. 22 - Badminton Doublea and singles, double elimination

Mar. 28 - Golf No handicap - 1 8 holes

Apr 4 - Swimming Meet and Water Polo Boys and girls swimming meet together Men's water polo competition

Apr. 11 - Tennis Singles end Doubles competition

Apr. 25 - Softball - Pick up teams end pley May 2 - Softb11ll - Faculty, atudent conteat,

You are reminded thet lntremurel athletics era offered for your participation. When eough students de•lre to play a certain sport, It will be offered for their enjoyment. Slgn·up and play In the three·men baaketbDII lo11gue that will be on JanuDry 31, Wednesday, at tho gym, at 3130 In the afternoon. Watch tho pepor for lnformetlon about futuro events,

In addition to lack of continuity, lack of know-how hampers student efforts. This is especially true when they attempt to deal with complex issues such as industrial contamination of the environment, employment discrimination on the basis of race and sex, inequities in the tax laws or defective con~ sumer products. Such problems are not readily solved by symbolic demonstrations, marches or sit-ins. Scientific, legal, engineering, or medical expertise is needed to discover the extent of the ·prob­lem and to bring it to a solution.

In 1970-71 students in Oregon and Minnesota developed a way to provide continuity and expert knowledge to their efforts and to enhance their educational exper­iences. The vehicle was a student­funded Public Interest Research Group (PffiG). The theory behind the PmG was uncomplicated. Stu­dents in schools throughout each state hired their own full·time staff of lawyers, scientists, and other advocates. These profession­als provided continuity and focus to student efforts. In tum, through class work and staff supervised projects, students learned the techniques of public interest re­search. Each participating school elected student directors who set policy for the group. The money to pay for salaries and expenses came from student activity fees. However, students who formed PffiGs Insisted that the PmG fee should be refundable, first, to protect those not wlshlns to aup.

professionals wouldn't work for solve consumer problems. students, but most PmGs have . In fact~ Max Demerf, executive bad their pick of qualified ap- v1ce pres1den~ and genera.l counsel plicants. Some people worried that of the Amencan Industrial Bank-

ers . Association, says, "Every time

I Y h R I a new law is passed, somebodyp

S OUt eal y somewhere loses something. Every Anti;..Business? time the government assumes con-

America's youth is not really so trol over anything or anyone, it staunchly antibusiness as often pic- costs somebody something. It tured. ought to be obvious to all, that in

That's the evaluation returned the end, the loser and the payer by hundreds of College - Business is the consumer." Symposiums sponsored by the It would be a shame ii govern­Chamber of Commerce of the Uni- ment regulatory agencies and ted States. Put on by local, state standard-setting official were to and regional chambers across the make all our shopping decisions. country, thousands of students and Manufacturing innovations would hundreds of businessmen have certainly end, and so would our come together in confrontations wide choice of goods. which have developed mutual un- Just consider that a great many derstanding and admiration. things consumer families now save

Referring to the prevalent anti· for and buy were either not avail­business attitude, one student who able 20 years ago or were beyond attended a Symposium said: the reach of most budgets. For

'·The other side of the coin is example, according to the Biddle business responsibllity to social Survey, recent records of spending values and the implementation of (in annual rates) show that since those values. Businessmen are 1970 the public spent 19 per cent more open·mindcd and attentive more on housing, 20 per cent more about things that concern them and on clothing and shoes, 22.8 per their companies than I , once cent more on furniture and house­thought. hold equipment, and 47 per cent

"The Symposium makes you stop more on automobiles and parts. and think of businessmen as hu· That's ~ pretty good measure of mans and not machines." high employment and consumer at-

Results of Symposiums are prov· flucnco. In spite of imperfections, on, Perhaps one in this communi· our system of free choice in the ty will pave tho way toward better mnrkot place is still tho boat way understanding between business to protect the real interests of the nnd youth. consumer.

port PmG activities and, second, piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-t to Sivo students a means of re-stricting the PmG should It prove unresponsive or ineffective.

Fortunately, tho first PmGs have been so successful that in Minnesota, whore the best figures are available, refunds total leas thnn flvo percent of tho money collected, Moreover, 1111 word of tho succoaa of tho first groups spread, now PmGs woro organlz. ed. All follow tho same baalc for­muln, but ench Ia lndopondont

RIGAL NOTICI Underatand Plave, Novel• and Poem• Paater with Our Not11 Wo'ro now nncl wo'ro tho bill· "oRtl ThouannclA of toplcH re· vlowod for qulclcor undoratnnd· lng. Our aubjocta Include not only l~nJJllsh, hut Anthropology, Al't, Ulnck Stucllo11, Ecology, Eco· nomlca, Eclucntlon, lllstory, J.nw, Mualc, Philosophy, Polltlonl Bel· onco, JlHycholn!ly, Uollnlon, Sci· onco, Snclnlo~ty nnd Urhnn Prob· loma. Soncl $2 for )'O\Il' cntn· lnM ut topics nvnllnblo,

RIIGAL NOTII 3160 "0" Strttt, N. W,

Waehtnuton, D. C, 20007 Talophonet 202-333·0201 I

EASTER PAGEANT · . '

Plans are being made for the Eester Pageant. The casting com­mittee Ia meeting and people are beglng considered for various parts. If you are Interested In a role or being on a committee, please fill out this form and drop It In the campus mallbox1

Nama

EASTER PAGEANT MH·B, Box 343 Campus

Add rea a ........................................ --·-··· Phone ----·-------.... - -·-·

:lasslflcatlon -·-------·-.. ··---··----.. ···---.. ·-···--·-···· ........................... -.

Compliments of

BRITT DRUG CO.

112 E. Centra I - Phone 93.9-2682

.... - ....

Miss MH-B Pageant, March 8-10

FIFTY-SIXTH YEAR MARY HARDIN-BAYLOR COLLEGE, BELTON, TEXAS, MARCH 7, 1973 No. 18

First Three-Night Pageant "Individua!lY and Collectively"

will be the colorful theme of the fourth annual Miss Mary Hardin­Baylor Pageant. to be staged the evenings of March 8, 9 and 101 at the "Mabee Student Ceater on the MH-B campus.

Slater Foods, Janice DeBolt; Al­Pha Chi, Lyn T\lompson; Alpha l\Iu Gamma, Linda Moore; Baptist Student union, Stephanie Barrett; Bells Staff, Susan Keller; Burt Dorm, Ci1cryl l\Ioore; Freshman Clnss, Lanu Bunch; Getty Dorm, Debbie Ham and Historical Phila

Carul~·n Ticc, p:~geant director, Society, Sharon Pavoggi. said the show this y~ln· will be the Also vying for the title are Miss. most ambitious production planned since the start of the annual pro- cs Jo:~nson Dorm, Sandy Whee­

less; Junior Class, Karen Hanne­grarn at Mary Hardin-Baylor. She said it will be a show de- mann;. l\lu Eta Beta Fraternity,

Linch Glass; Nursing Students As­signed to depict the poise, , grace sr.·ciaticn, Dclor::s Chupik; Phi and beauty of th~ contestants who Alpha Theta, Jennifer Jordan; Phi are seeking the :Uiiss Mary Hardin- Beta Lambda, Mary Wright; Phi Baylor title, and it will be a show Epilson Mu, Betty Reddell and Psi designed to please the capacity au- Th t R b' M rff d' t d 11 th · hts e a, 0 m u · 1ence expec e a ree mg . C 1 f " th r· t a M' s

The new Miss Mary Hardin-Bay- om~ e m., e .15 • re lS es lor College will be crowned at the Recreational As:;;ocmtl_on, Te~esa

. . . . Gantt; Royal Academ1a Soctety, chmax of the fmal compebhon by Gl · M tt 8 · Cl M the retiring Miss Mary Hardin- ona a _son; emor ass, ary

Intense rehearsals have kept contestants busy in preparing for the fourth annual Miss Mary Hardin-Baylor Pageant. ·

B I D bb.· Od C Ann Krup1cka; Sophomore Class, ay or, e 1e om ox. C 1 R St 'bl' Do B tty The new Mary Hardin-Baylor ar~ oen; rt mg rm, e

queen of grace, beauty and talent ~a':s; Stude':lt Government Asso­will be awarded a full tuition e1at1on,_ Terr1 ~Yk.e; Texas State

The curtain goes up at 7:30, with a medley from "Fiddler On March 8, on the first preliminary the Roof." night of the 4th annual Miss Mary The clothes designers are Miss­Hardin-Baylor Scholarship Pageant es Mary Wright, Carol Roen and at MH-B'a Mabee Student Center. Robin Murff. Each of these girls Two prelllllinary nights of compe- will model several co-ordinated titlon will lead to the climax of fashions which they have made. the Pageant when the judges Floor exercises will be present­

. reach their final decision on Sat- ed by Miss Teresa Gantt to the urday, March 10. music of "Never My Love". Miss

"If advance previews of rehear· Betty Reddell will display her sal sessions are any Indication· of skills on the uneven parallel bars what's ahead, this year-s Miss MH·B with "Pink Panther" as back-up Pageant, promises to be a good music. To excerpts from "Jesus show of talent and beauty," com· Ch1•ist, Superstar", Miss Sharon mented Carolyn Tice, Pageant Pavoggl will work on the balance director. "This Is really going to beam and the. uneven parallel be something for the people of"the bars. entire area - something to re· Self written comedy monologues member for a long time." will be executed by Misses Linda

Thoro are 211 talented young lad· Moore, Janice DeBolt and Stepha· los participating In tho contest. · Their talents range from out­standing vocal ablllty as well as aong, danco and sowing,

Committee Heads And StaH Picked Seven of the contestants wlll

present dramatic readings, six will compote as vocalists, three will Production staffers and commit· show their skills In gymnastics, co chairmen pre busy at work three wlll present comedy mono~ for tho 1073 Miss Mary llardln· logues, three will display their Baylor Pageant, said Carolyn Ticc, sewing abilities, two will dance director. and one will twirl. Serving as nsslsstnnt director

Dramatic readings will be by Is Dee Douahtly, an art and Mlas Lyn Thompson, presenting a nursing sophomore major from Carl Sandburll favorite ·'To A Dallas. Nancy Irvin, junior social ContomporPrY Bunkshootor"; Mill sclcnco major of Austin, wlll J.anu Bunch glvimr "I Am An Am· servo as backatago director. Stago orlean"; MIRR Dobblo Ham oxhlb· asalatant la Booky Wideman of ltlng "Dosldorata"; Miss Gloria Pharr, physlcad education major. Mattson portraylnlf a scono from F1•om Texas City, Terl Mooro Is "Pln~a Sulto"; "Om• Flag" dono actlnlf aa buslneaa manngor. Soc· by MIBB Linda Glnaa; Miss Jan rotnry Is Margie llcnncacy, San Woatfall with a special presonta· Antonio. Uon of "Tho Lord'a Prayer;" and Committee chairmen Include Karen Hanneman with a roadlnll Dorothy Dunn of Rlchardaon with entltloll "Effort of Spooch Do· ticket aalea; Awardl, Diann Rob· tween Two l'coplo." oraon of Midland; llouao, Sonya

Tho vocall1ta aro Mlaa Sandy Hundley of Taylol'i Program book, Whooloaa, who will alml "I Am Chrla Wnlker of Uarvoy, J.n; Ro· Woman"; MIRII Dcloroa Chuplk, coptlon, Leo Sanderford of Jl:l Pa· 11Sunrlao, Sunaot"; Mh11 .Tonnlfer ao; Vlaltlng Quoona, Vlckl Clltea of Jordan, "Sweet Jnaplratlon"; Ml•• Grand Pralrlo; Jloateaa, Mra, Ann Peggy Slmmera, "Love Ja Whore Spoors of Dolton, and Publlolty, You Find Jt"; Mill Suaan Koller, Molly Pater1on or Lampaaaa and "Peaooful"; and Mill Torrl Jryko Pnm Trawook of llbuaton,

ch b. . . . Educat1on Assoclatlon, Peggy Slm-.. s plars Jp .. She... w.ill., also: .. gaiD:> n1ei's'' ~nd Yo\mg"Dtimocrtits '; ·Jan

the ·right to represent Mary Har- Westfall. ' · din·Baylor In the ~Iss Texas Pag- Tickets for each performance can

nle . Barrett. eant and the op!'ortunity to seek be obtained at the college book· Dancing to the. tune of "Wake scholarship bene~lts awarded to the store or through Dorothy Dunn,

Up Sunshine" will be Miss Betty state queen. 211 B t Davis. Miss Cheryl Moore will Winner of the Miss Texas; Pag- ur_·---o---present a modern jazz to "Promis- eant will be launched on a glamor­es, Promises." ous journey which will take her to

Miss Mary Ann Krupicka will Atlantic City, N. J., as state repre­competc in talent with twirling set sentative in the national Miss to the mood of "Georgie Girl". America Pageant, where she will

___ ,0 compete with the state queens from "Some folks believe the best throughout the nation for the title

way to start federal aid to educa- of Miss America .which carries a tlon would be to teach arithmetic $10,000 schola1·ship award and the in Washington, D. c." opportunity for a year of personal

appearances throughout the United netcha the only man who likes States. The state queen also will

to hear alarm clocks lfo off is the save the oppOI·tunity to gain other national scholarships awarded to

.. n;;ig;;h;;t;;w;;;;at;;c;;h;;m;;a;;n;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ llnallsts In the national pageant I' and to contestant~ judged to be

.. ODD DAY IS COMING

outstanding In talent. Tho 25 contestants In the pag.

cant wll compete In evening gown, swimsuit and talent divisions.

Contestants Include Misses A. R.

Phi Beta Lambda News

Phi Beta Lambda Business Soc­iety attended the state convention at the Statler Hilton Hotel in Dal­las last weekend.

Representing the society were Miss Rhonda Brock, Miss Carol Thomas, Mr. John Bradbe1·ry and Mr. Ernest Wllliams. Mr. Williams entered the cxtcmporanous speak­ing contest and Mr. Bradberry entered "Mr. Futuro Business Executive." Miss Brock entered competition seeking the Who's Who title .

Mr. Robert Whitis, sponsor, and Dr. Beatrice Huston, advisor, ac· companied the group on tho trip.

A apeclalty cl1nce reutln• will be pNitntlcl each performance of tho thr ... nlght pageant • .

PAGE 2 THE BELLS MARCH 7, 1973

It's Tough to Be a Judge They're All Lovely

.t'ivc prominent judges from varied fileds of interest will serve on a panel to select the new Miss Mary Hardin-Baylor March 10.

They will score the pomts which will determine the winner as the lovely young ladies compete in e\·e­ning gown, swimsuit and talent di­visions.

The personable girl selected Miss Mary Hardin-Baylor at the climax of the pageant to be staged in the Mabee Student Center under spon­sorship of Mary Hardin-Baylor Col­lege will gain the right to continue a cilmb toward added honors in

Letters to Editor Dear Editor:

I am asking your cooperation in printing this letter so that I may reach the general student population.

I am attempting to accumulate some meaningful data for a ser­ious study on American com­munes. To that end, I wish to reach as many communes as pos­sible.

I will be grateful if students, graduate and undergraduate, who are living in communal situa­tions, will write me indicating willingness to receive a ques­tionnaire and/or to be interview­ed. Size of commune is unimport­ant; 3 or 4 people, up to any number. Sincerely, Mae T. Sperber

· 26 West 9th Street, 9E New York, New York 10011

the Miss Texas Pageant to be con­ducted duhing July at Fort Worth.

The winner of the Miss Texas Pageant will carry the state ban­ncr to the national Miss America Pageant in Atlantic City, N. J., to seek the crown and fame as the new Miss America.

Serving on the final night five­member panel of judges will be:

Mr. B. Don Magness is Chairman of the Board of the Miss Texas Corporation. He was President of the Miss Texas Pageant in 1970 and 1971 and Executive Director in 1968 and 1969. He is presently a member of its Board of Trustees and Board of Directors.

Mrs. Peggy Mcl\Iahon is present­ly serving her fourth consecutive year on the Board of Directors of the Miss Texas Scholarship Pag­eant. She has accompanied ·three Miss Texas title holders to the Miss America Pageant as the Offi­cial State Chaperone.

Mr. George Petrek is the Execu­tive Director of the 1973 Miss Tex­as Pageant. He is a member of the Board of Directors and cur­rent manager of Miss Texas 1972, Mae Beth Cormany. He was the Executive Director of the 1972 Miss Texas Pageant.

Mrs. Carolyn Hames is the Exe­cutive Secretary of the Miss Texas Scholarship Corporation, and is presently serving her fifth conse­cutive year. A member of the Board of Directors, she is one of the official chaperones for Miss Texas.

Mr. Richard LaBoon is the Asso­ciate Producer of the Miss Texas Scholarship Pageant and cuhhently

The 1973 Miss Mary Hardin-Baylor Pageant will be the first public production in the new Mabee Student Center. Construction crew members examine the auditorium in preparation for the annual event.

Tickets on Sale for the Miss MH-8 Scholarship Pageant

Tickets are on sale for the first public production scheduled in the new $800,000 Mabee Student Center at Mary Hardin-Baylor College.

Area residents are being given the opportunity to see the new center during the 1973 Miss Mary Hardin - Baylor Scholarship Pag­eant, scheduled the nights of March 8, 9, and 10. Tickets range from $1.50 to $1.00 for adults, and 75 cents and 50 cents for students,

ka, Route 2. From Belton - Betty W. J. Davis, 909 Sherwood Drive, Reddell, daughter of B. A. Reddell, Arlington.

WANTED: Student(s) to help with nursery during "Mother's Day Out". 9 to 3 on Thurs­days, Call First Methodist Church, Temple.

serves on the Board of Directors. and are sold at the College He also has produced both the Miss store, 817_939.5811, Ext. 45. Fort Worth and Miss White Settle-

book-

Route 1; Carol Roen, the daughter Also competing are Terri Fyke, of Mr. Arnold T. Roen, 304 Green- daughter of George W. Fyke, 1402 briar. From Killeen - Janice De- Elm, Dalhart; Jan Westfall, daugh­Bolt, daughter of R. L. DeBolt, ter of Mr. and Mrs. Pat. Westfall, 1012 Conder; Linda Glass, daugh- 307 12th, Somerville; Jennifer Jor­ter of W. B. Glass, 2306 16th, don, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. Brownwood; Mary Lynn Wright, L. Jordan, 14718 Carolcrest, Hous· daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert ton; and Sharon Pavoggi, daughter Wright, 217 West Avenue G; and of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Pavoggi, Peggy Simmers, daughter of Mr. 9815 Cornus, El Paso. Debbie Ham, and Mrs. Robert Simmers, 702 Jas- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde per Drive. From Nolanville-Glor- W. Ham, 420'0ld Robstown Road; ia Mattson, daughter of James Stephanie Barrett, daughter of Mr. Mattson, Jr., Box 314. and Mrs. H. H. Barrett, 4006 Mar-ment Pageants. Twenty-five young women will

Tickets for the annual affair compete in the pageant. The win­may be purchased in the college ner wlll be crowned Miss Mary bookstore beginning Feb. 26. Hardin-Baylor College, earn a

Others are Sandra Wheeless, ion Circle; and Lell Susan Keller, daughter of Vardy Wheeless, 1013 daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. D. Kirk, Taylor; Lanu Bunch, daugh- Himes, 925 Barracuda ·Place, are_ ter of Mr. and Mrs. Joe H. Bunch, all from Corpus Christl. Comple-3115 Carlisle, and Teresa Gantt, ting the list, from Texas City, are daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cheryl Ann Moore, the daughter of W. Gantt, 1809 Corona Drive, Aus- Mr. and Mrs. James J. Moore, 1717 tin; Karen Hannemann, daughter 14th Avenue N.; and Robin Murff, of Rev. and Mrs. L. G. Hanneman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. 503 South Tyler,McGregor; Delores Murff, 1714 14th Avenue N.; and Chuplk, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lyn Thompson, tho daughter of Johnny E. Chupik, Route 1, Rog. Mr. and Mrs. S. G. Thompson 619 crs; and Betty Davis, daughter of College, Sulphur Springs.

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~--- full-tuition scholarship, and go on i to compete in the Miss Texas Pag-

II MAKE PLANS NOW II

MISS MARY HARDIN-BAYLOR PAGEANT

March 8, 9, 10 7:30 p.m.

Mabee Student Center

Ticket• on tale February 26

MH-B Bookstore

eant in Fort Worth next July. The Miss Texas winner will enter the Miss America competition at At­lantic City, N. J., where awards include a $10,000 scholarship.

Carolyn 'l'ice, MH-B pageant dir­ector, said a capacity audience in the Mabee Student Center is ex­pected each night of competition.

!~a~:.5 ;~:::.nt~e~~:y~0 a~~dg~:le~~ Preliminary Judges Named for Pageant displayed during the pageant, which Includes traditional swim· Twenty • five contestants - each suit and evening gown parades. with her eyes on the crown worn Talent competition this year rang- by Dobbie Cox, Miss Mary Har­es from gymnastics to sewing, and din-Baylor 1972-wlll be narrow­includes comedy, song and dt•ama- ed to 10 semi-finalists by a panel tic readings. or rtvo preliminary night judges.

Contestants In tho 1973 MU-B Contestants will compete March Jlagonnt nrc: From Temple - Lin- 8 and 9 In evening gown, swimsuit, dn Moore, daughter of Mt•. and nnd talent competitions. Polnb1 Mrs. R. L. Moore, 3110 Anacaeho will bo scored dotormlnlng the ton Drive; Mntoy Ann Krupicka, daugb- aoml-rtnallsts which will bo on·

Vanda Beauty Counselor Products for tho central and west Texas areas. She has dlt·ected the Miss Gatesville Pageant for five years.

;Mrs. June Christie is from Har­ker Heights. A graduate of Mary llnrdln-Baylor with a degree ln speech, Mrs. Christie has judged numerous pageants of val'lod types tht•oughout tho area.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t:o:r~o=f~M~~~nn:d~M:r:s:·~W:·~T:·~K=r~u~p~~- nouncod during S~urdny evening~ ·;;..... performance, Tho ten somi-flnal-

Mr. Harold Whittington of Tom· plo Is an Instructor of political scl· once at Tomplo Junior College. Ho Is nlos an established newspaper· mnn nnd froolnnco writer.

. Dancing to the mualc of "lond ltrHt," C1rolyn Tlct and contlltanta work to perfect choreo­graphy,

IHts will then compote Saturday night with five finalists being chos­en from tho semi-finalists and Miss 1\fnry Hardln-Baylot• 1073 chosen Snturday night from tho flvo fln­nllsts.

Sot•ving on tho prolimlnary nlghtB flvo-momhoJ' judging punol m•o Mrs. Kuron Whlt11on ft•om Huntsville. Sho Is the Asslstnnt Donn of Students nt Snm Houston State Unlvcrlllty nnd wns t•oconlly nnmed to tho Outstnndlng Youn" Women of Amertcn.

Mrs. Dotty Tlll'ashcr or Gntosvltlc Is prosonlly tho diRtt•lbutor fot•

Mt•. Dan Acree of Killeen Is pres· cntly the now dlt•cctor for KTON rndlo station. He Is president of tho Metro Modla Club. lie ls also 11 mombor of tho l(llloon Exchange Club and Killeen Jaycees,

WANTIDI Student to help with phyalcal therapy for • man aoon to be rela•Hd from thea VA In hla home, P•rt· time •pproxlmately 2 hra, • day, Contact Mr. P•ul Peter• aon, 778-4811, ext. 40S,

Publlahed weekly at Mary Herdln·Beylor College 11 1 part of the atudent activity, Return ~oatege guaranteed,

Entered at tlie Poat Office In Belton, Tox111 11 aecond-cllll metter under the Act of March 3, 1873, Editor -----····--.. ·--·-·-·-·-···---·"·····---·--·· Suaan Keller Alllttent Edltora --- Sheila Richardton, Vonl• Hopkin• Bualn••• Manager -· --- Janice Andrew•

MARCH 7, 1973 THE BELLS PAGE 3

1972 '~Miss MH-B'' Ends Year of Reign

Lovely Debbie Cox, who soon will relinquish her crown as Miss Mary Hardin - Baylor College, commented that her year as hold­er of the title has been the most memorable of her life.

"I feel it has enabled me to meet a wide variety of people, to broaden my outlook on life, and has permitted me to serve as a representative of the many young persons at Mary Hardin-Baylor," she remarked.

Mary Hardin - Baylor College. Debbie competed in the Miss

Texas Pageant during July 1972 along with 64 other contestants from across the state. As her tal­ent, she presented the aria "0 Mio Caro Babino" by Puccini. She also competed in both swimsuit and evening gown competitions during the four night pageant held each year in Fort Worth.

Since winning the title in Nov­ember 1971,. Debbie has appeared at a number of civic and social functions.

Debbie Cox, retiring Miss Mary .. Hardin-Baylor, watches whiles contestants prepare for the upcoming pageant.

Debbie will relinquish h e r title when she crowns the new Miss Mary Hardin - Baylor who will be selected Saturday night, March 10, in the Mabee Student Center at the climax of the pageant conducted under sponsorship of

Although she will be ending her year of duties, she said she is pleased that she can make way for another college young lady to enjoy the honor of wearing the crown of Miss Mary Hardin - Bay­lor.

T I W• hd I f f d I f d program costs and some grants-GIG It rawa 0 e era un s in-aid are offered as incentives.

Education Course Will Be Offered

· In commenting on the need for

Urged for State Wl.thout Land Use Plans sanctions, Pickelner said that "fe~- Mary Hardin-Baylor College will · eral funds from the Federal Ald be offering a course in secondary

education. from March 12 to May 66 2/3% of the states' land use "The U. S. Constitution implied Highway Programs, the Airport llL at the Fort Hood Education

"Each one of the 25 contestants entered in the pageant this year is worthy of the honor," she said, adding, -'although only one will be selected for the title, all the girls who participate in the pag­eant will find it a rewarding ex-Without the necessary sanctions that the authority to govern the Assitance Progr~m, the Land and Center.

and incentives, the present Con- use of land rested with the states" Water ConservatlOn Fund, and the The· eight-week course, Education perience." gressional approach to a national Pickelner explained. "Beginni~g intercep~or and conne~tor sewer 430, "Methods of Teaching in Se- ---.o----land use policy is "an inadequate about 100 years ago," he noted, grants ?1ven by the Environmental condary Schools", will be taught MH-8 History Club solution to the problem," accord- "that authority was lost when the Protectmn Ag_ency and the Depart- by "Cotton" Adams, principal of Adds Four Members ing to a spokesman of the National states started handing over all ment of Housmg and ~rban Devel- Avenue D School in Killeen. Phi Alpha Theta, International Wildlife Federation. their .controls through zoning en- opment shoul~ be Wlthhel_d from The course, approved for teach- honor society in history, initiated - In February 7 testimony before abling acts to local municipalities th~ states untll th_ey are dm c~m~ er certification in Texas, is open four new members Feb. 24, at the Senate Committee on Interior and counties." phance • : · not ~~poun ed, u to both military personnel and civ- Mary Hardin-Baylor College. and Insular Affairs, Joel Pickelner, "In short, Pickelner explained, totally · Wlthdrawn. ilians. William E. Strubel, a senior NWF conservation counsel, empha- "the bill should enable all the·. The Federation believes that Registration for the class will from Belton; Russell Carroll, a sized that while the Federation states to reclaim that authority and cutting off ~PA and Ht;JD sewer be at the Fort Hood Center March junior from Belton; Rosalind Jones, was prepared to generally support to develop their own land use plans funds and h1ghway momes would 12 during the first class meeting a senior from Holland and Sandra the approach taken in a national under a broad, flexible umbrella not only provide a planning in- time. Classes are currently sched- Boales a senior fr~m Killeen, land use planning bill spon~ored of federal guidelines." centive for state_s but ~ould also uled for Monday and Wednesday were formally inducted by the Eta-by Senator Henry Jackson {Wash;), The NWF is concerned that an lessen the negabve env1ronmental nights, from 6 to 9 o'clock. Omicron Chapter at MH-B. it feared that the bill might end effective system of federal sane- impact caused by uncontrolled re- Members of the organization are up being an empty philosophical tions should be coupled with a velopment. "There are no greater Contract Awarded elected on the basis of excellence statement without "any effective strong incentives program in order growth-inducing programs than the h in the study and writing of his-sanctions or strong incentives." to provide encouragement for the highway and sewer programs," To Drama Coac tory. Phi Alpha Theta is largest Jackson's proposal, S.268, is the states to implement their own pho- Pickelner said. "lt makes no ·sense Charles Taylor of the Mary Bar- in number chapters of the accre­first federal legislaiton which grams. At present, the bill con· to hand out grant money for better din-Baylor College Speech and Dra· dited honor societies holding mem­would control t~e long-term use tains no provisions for federal planning an~ to improve land use rna Department has received a con· bership in the Association of Col­of the nation's land. sanctions, and federal funding of controls whde, at the same time, tract from the Performance Pub- lege Honor Societies. The objec­-------------------'-· -------- more money is going out to build lis~ing Company, Chicago, for tive of the organization is the pro­

growth-inducing public utilities prmting his play, Legacy. Perfor- motion of history by the encour­that are not subject to these emer- mance Publishing has also agreed ageme~t of research, good teach· ging land use powers." to publish another script, The ing, publication, and the exchange EASTER PAGEANT The NWF spokesman said that Honor System, when Mr. Taylor of Ideas among historians.

Plans are being made for the Easter Pageant. The casting com­mittee Is meeting and people are beglng considered for various parts. If you are Interested In a role or being on a committee, please fill out this form and drop It In the campus mailbox:

any federal Involvement should has completed its adoption from Gene Pruitt is president of MH· leave enough flexibility for the a teleplay to a stage production. B's Eta-Omicron Chapter. William states to implement their own Assistant professor of Speech Harlow of the history fnculty is programs. "Any attempt on the and Dramn at MH-B, Mr. Taylor, ndvlser to the organization. part of the federal government to 602 Nol'th 4th, Temple, Is a former a;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=. set criteria will probably bacltlire member of the Temple .Tunlor Col-

Name

EASTER PAGEANT MH-B, Box 343 , Campus

...... --~----·------·----·---·--- --· _____________ ., _________ ... _ and promote development rather lege faculty, He received both his than control it." Masters and Bachelor of Fine Arts

degrees from the University of A burgeoning population nnd lo- Texas nnd has had previous one·

cal development decisions made net plays published .

Address ---·------------·--··-·--·--- ----- Phone ·--··----------------without regat·d for the long-term Ol---

cnvlronmental 'Implications have Dnlsy Is so dumb she doesn't

:l~:~sslflcatlon -------·-·----~---.:..··-----··----·-····--··-------------d know the difference between a

mnde 8 natlonnl policy for Inn West Pointer nnd nn Irish Setter. use "long overdue."

Your Opinion May Be Worth a $1,000 Scholarship In Reed & Barton's

"SILVER OPINION COMPETITION" During the months of February ~:~nd March, Reed & B~:~rton, America's oldest

m~:~lor silversmiths, are conducting a "Sliver Opinion Competition" In which valu­able scholershlps totelllng $2,500 ere being offered to duly enrolled women students 11t 11 few selected colleges ~:~nd universities,

Mary H~:~rdln-Beylor College has been selected to enter this competition In which the First Grand Award Is a $1,000 scholershlp, Second Gr11nd Awerd Is 11 $500 scholerahlp, Third Grand Award Is e $300 schol~:~rshlp, and Seven Gr~:~nd Awerds of $100 each scholarships. In eddltlon, there will be 100 other awerds consisting of aterllng allver, fine chln11 and cryatel with a retail velue of ap· proxlm~:~tely $85.00

In the 1973 "Sliver Opinion Competition", an entry form llluatr~:~tea twelve designs of sterling with eight designs of beth chin~:~ ~:~nd cryatel. The entrents almply list the three beat comblnetlons of sterling, chine and cryst~:~l from the p~:~tterns lllustreted. Scholershlps and awards will be made to thoae entrlea metch· lng or coming closet to the unanimous selections of Table-Setting editors from three of the natlon'a leading megazlnes.

Min Lisa White Is the Student Representative who Ia conducting the "Sliver Opinion Competition" for Reed & B~:~rton at MH-B. Thoae Interested In entering the "Sliver Opinion Competition" ahould contact Mlaa White at 205 Stribling for entry blanks and for complete details concerning the competition rulea, She alao has aamplea of 12 of the moat popular Reed & B~:~rton designs ao that entrants can see how these sterling pattern• actually look,

Through the opinions on sliver design, expre11ed by college women com· petlng for these scholarships, Reed & Barton hopes to compile a valuable library of expressions of you no. American taate,

---o~---Too mnny peoplo wnRto their

time until their time is about gone,

BSU CALENDAR OF EVENTS - 1973 Mar. 9·1 1 Apr. 20-22

May 21-30 Aug, 15-20

Mlulona Conference - Fort Worth lntern~:~tlonal Student Conference -

Palestine, Texas Mexico Mlaslon Trip - Valle Hermoso, Mexico Glorieta Student Week - Glorieta, New Mexico

Art p/a,tsr and accsssonss

F'ot~ art

gsa;~ng'IIIJ ffl'csd s'nfc'hfly lu's Cand/IS S inc1n11

.E'.t.u. ln.P/ruotlons In "'iflfora "'. Discs IJ _prints

for cr.acltltng Workroom DfJ'n

43rd IJ WAv•."M" T•mpl• 773-7521

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PAGE 4 THE BELLS MARCH 7, 1973

MH-B to Be Represented In Miss Texas Pageant

Every young girl dreams of be· coming Miss America. The girl who is selected Miss Mary Har­din Bayior Pageant Queen could be the next Miss America.

Pageant plans are well under­day for the 1973 Miss Mary Har­din-Baylor • Pageant. The Pageant is being produced on a profession­al level for the fourth consecutive year. Winner of the college pag­eant will be an automatic contest­ant in the 1973 Miss Texas Pag­eant held in For Worth during July.

Debbie Cox is the reigning Miss MH·B. Debbie is a senior elemen­tarY education major, served as president of Historical Phila Soc­ciety and member of Alpha Chi Fraternity and Sigma Alpho Iota Music Fraternity. A native of Grand Prairie, Debbie's talent at Fort Worth was the aria, "0 Mio

Miss America '73 Begins 53rd Year The Miss America Pageant, goal

of every contestant who enters the Miss Mary Hardin-Baylor Pag­eant, has begun its second half· century in September at the na· tiona! finals in Atlantic City, N.J.

Pinnacle of secret dreams each year by young ladies throughout the nation, the Miss America Pag. cant in 1973 will celebrate its 53rd anniversary as an institution that has become a true part of

Caro Babino" by Puccini. All campus organizations were

invited to participate in this year's contest. "Miss MH-B should repre­sent the entire college campus­not only a few selected organiza­tions," commented Carolyn Tice, pageant director. Those organiza­tions include A Cappella Choir, A.R.A. Slater Foods, Alpha Chi, Alpha Mu Gamma, Baptist Stu­dent Unions, Bells Staff, Bluebon­net Staff and Burt Dormitory. Ad­ditional invitations went to the Daughters Club, Freshman Class, Gettys Dor.mitory, Historical Phila Society, Johnson Dormitory, Jun­ior Class, Junior Scholarship, Latin American Scholarship and Mu Eta Beta Fraternity.

Other organizations include the Nursing Students Association, Phi Alpha Theta, Phi Epsilon Mu, Psi Theta, Recreational Association, Royal Academia Society and the Science Club. The Senior Class, Sigma, Alpha Iota, Sigma Delta Pi, Sigma Tau Delta, Sophomore Class, Spanish Club, and Stribling Dormitory have been asked to participate. Student Government Association, Texas State Teachers Association, The Theater, Young Business Leaders and Young Dem· ocrats complete the list.

To qualify, a young lady must be between tho ages of 18 and 28 on September 1, must be a high school graduate by September 1 and must never have been mar­ried.

Talent will be considered in the judging and each contestant should possess some quality of

Americana. talent, either trained or potential. Started at the drawing of the In discussing the talent qualifica­

decade of the roaring 1920's as tion Miss Tice stressed that the a simple bathing beauty contest, it range is varied and that no girl has evolved through a half cen- must necessarily be trained in tury to become as familiar in the any specific field. She also point­lore of America as mither's home- ed out that in almost every na­made apple pie. tional Miss . America Pageant con-

Carolyn nee, Pageant Director

"The American Idea: The Land" Years ago, the crown of Miss ducted at Atlantic City, N. J., "The Land," part one of "The (EST). had given up their homes across

America was covered bf young there have been state queens who Ameriean Idea," a series of hour- -'The Land" is the story of Amer- the seas and, although bewildered ladies thrilled with the fame and have presented dramatie readings long Specials, debuts on Sunday, lea as seen in a series of nostalgic by the magnitude and strangeness glamour of being selected the most or comedy monologues as their March 18 on ABC-TV, at 8:00 PM reutdons with our forefathers who of the new land to which they beautiful and charming girl in the talent presentations before a pan- · didn't quite belong, were deter-nation. el of nationally prominent judees. mined to make it home. '

The shimmer of fame and gla- Poise, beauty and talent are the R • • 0 f T h E Guest narrators include Henry mour still shines brightly for three major requirements. Each eg1strat10n pen or eac er xams Fonda, Cloris Leachman, the late those seeking the crown, but most contestant will be judged in eve- Edward G. Robinson and Dick Van now arc also seeking the scholar- nlng gown, in swimsuit and in the Less than two weeks remain finish at approximately 12:30 p.m. Dyke who speak about the heri-shlp benefits awarded throughout presentation of her talent. for prospective teachers who plan Dr. McConnell adds. The Teaching tage of our land 'and the people the local and state pageants con- to take the National Teacher Ex- Area Examinations wlll begin at who founded lt. · dueled as part of the national or- amination at Mary Hardin-Baylor 1:30 p.m. and should finish at ap· The Special Is, in a way, almost a ganlzation, and at the Miss Amort- Business Ma·lors at on April 7, to submit their reg- proximately 4:115 p.m., according love song to America and to Its ca Pageant finals staked each lstrations for these tests to Edu- to the time schedule for these most precious asset, the land, and September In Atlantic City the MH·B May Get Aid cational Testing Service, Prince- examinations which has been set the uniquely American principle week following Labor Day. ton, N. J. Dr. Dorothy McConnell, up by Educational Testing Scr· that each man In this new world

The Miss America Pageant or- Students majoring In account- dean of students, announces. Reg. vice. might own a portion of lt. It tells ~nnlzation conducts tho largest ing nt Mary 1-Iardln·Baylor College lstratlons for the examination the story of rural America, of the flcholarshlp program for young aro now eligible for loans up to must be forwarded, so as to reach Patllicia Ripley to farms, the fields and the forests, women In the world. Since the $4,1500, according to an announce- the Princeton office not later than Prelent Program of lakes and rivers, of mountains start of tho scholarship program mont by Dt•, Boatrlco Huston, March 15, Dr. McConnell advlsos. and of plains. in 19415, approximately $7 million chairman of the Department of Bulletins of Information doscrl· Patricia Ripley, an actross and "Tho Land" Is painted on a huge In benefits have boon awarded to ;Business Administration. bing rc;lstration procedures and writer will spook In a spoolol pro- pletorlal canvas In tiny brush contestants at tho local, state and 1 1 f gram on Thursday, March a at strokes; folk songs, family bibles, national levels. Throughout the Accounting students recently containing reg strat o~ ~:'~n~!fi 11:00 a.m. In W.W. Walton Chapel. Inscriptions on tombstones, dlar­organlzation, thor arc approxl- became eligible for loans under bo obtained from Dth' N tl 1 Sho Is presenting a program via los letters samplers, poems, blog-

1 t a Pro"ram sponsored b" tho Edu or directly from 0 0 ona ' ' d tt 1 d ad matcly 3,1500 locn pagoan s con· • , • T 1 E lnntions Educational tho Temple Uumllnltles Sorlcs. raphlcs, logon s, r ua s an • dueled ouch year, loading to the cotlonnl Foundation of the Tox- oac lor xam ' l Ms Ripley has oxporlonco on tho vertlsomonts 50 stntc pngeonts nnd tho national ns Society of Certified Publlc Ac· Testing Sorvlc~, Box 911, Pr nco- stago' tolovlslon nnd in the mov· Backing thl~ filmed essay on the pageant In Atlnntlc City. Approxl- countnnts. The foundation has in- ton, N. J. 085 0. los. She hns actod with Pnul Now- growth and development of Am· mntoly 70,000 glrla enter tho com- eluded MH·B in Its loan program At the ono-dny toat session, a man, Chnrlca Lnu11hton and Patrl· crlca arc an original score by petition each year. bccauao tho college now offers candidates may take tho Common cia Neal amonll others. Rlchnrd Rogers and folk music

MoRt MIRa Amct•lcns hi recent n hnchclor of business admlnlstra· Examinations, which Include tests In addition to stage work she sung by the Roger Wa11nor Chor-yonrs have compdotcd their college tlon dc11roo wlth nn .accounting tn Pt•ofcsslonnl Education und ha11 toured throughout the nation nle, Rlndles with aid of scholnrshlps, .mujor. General Educntlon, nnd one of the with repertory companies and has "Tho Lnnd," presented by Ford Inter mnrrlcd nnd now oro tnldng Under tho program, loons to one 27 Tonchlng Area Examinations tronslntcd and edited several ploys Motoa• Company, wns produced nctlvc t•olos In their respective atndont mny not exceed $4,500. which arc dcalgncd to cvaluntc nncl movie acrlpts. She wna rcapon- nnd directed by Wllllam Cnrt· communities. Show business hna NoJ•mnlly, lonna will go to junior hla undoa•stnndlnll of tho subject albic for trnnslotlng Tt•uffaut's wright for cxccutlvo producora hoon the 11onl of acvernl othol'& m• senior students In amounta of mntter nnd mcthocla nppllcablo to tllm "Fahrenheit 451". Alnn I..nndaburg nnd J"aurcncc D. who now nrc cstnbllahotl In fields $'730 for ouch IIOmcKtor, and $3'711 tho m•ca ho mny bo ll&slgncd to Evoryono Is Invited to attond. Snvndovo. lncludiniZ telovlslon. for each aummcr aoaalon. tonch. ·

Dr. Huston 111dd tho foundation Ench cnndldnte will rocclvo on

RIIIARCH MATIRIALI ALL TOPICI

Sond for your do•crlpttvc, up· to·llnto, 128-PRIIC, mnll order cntnloll of 8,300 quality ro· IIOarch papora. lnclo11 1.00 to cover poat••• and handling,

RIIIARCH UNLIMITID 119 Glenrock Avo,, lulte 201

LOI ANGILII, CALIII. 90024 (21 S) 477o1474 e 477·14tS

"Wa need a local •aloaman"

lonna nro modo on the baala of fl· admlulon ticket advlalng him of nnnclnl nood, acholnatlc record, tho oxnct Jocntlnn of the cantor faculty rccommcndnllona and dod· to which ho ahould rnport, Dr. lcntlon towards cnrocra in account· McConnell aalll, Cnndldntca for the lnu. In ncldltlon, tho foundntlon Common Examlnntlon will report pa·ovldoa 11n Accounting Excollonco at 0:90 p.m. on April '7, nnd should Awn rd.

In order for a collogo or unlvor· p;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii slty to bo ollglblo to nominate 11 cnndldntc tor tho Accounting Ex· collonoo Aw11rd It muat hove a minimum of flvo llrnduatlng aen· lora with 10 houra In acoountlnll at tho dato of graduation.

WANTIDI Pull or part•tlmt Caahltr•Hoattll for tho Holl• day Inn In Temple, No oxporo lonco neco11ary, will train .. Contact Mr. GravoMn, 771-4411.

Compliments of

BRITT DRUG CO. 112 E. Centra I - Phone 939-2682

FIFTY·SIXTH YEAR

Memorial Gift Program Begun

A memorial gift program was recently established at Mary Har­din-Baylor College, according to college president, Dr. Bobby Parker.

Memorial gifts may be sent to the college instead of sending fiowers in ·remembering a friend or relative. Many times, a gift to the college will be of equal or greater value to recognize a per­son than sending Dowers. Flowers are beautiful only for a short time, but an investment in young people through Mary Hardin­Baylor College will show beauty in young people for generations.

A recognition card will be sent donor and family of person rec­ognized indicating the gift. Also, a memorial book listing the gifts has been purchased.

The next time you want to honor, recognize or remember a person, consider a memorial gift to MH-B.

MARY HARDIN-BAYLOR COLLEGE, BELTON, TEXAS, MARCH 12, 1973 No. 19

''Outward Bound" Summer Jobs "Outward Bound," a play by Sut-

ton Vane, will be presented by OverseaS On Friday, March 2, several mem- ness of cotton. Then it was back The Theatre, the MH-B drama as- hers of the Home Economics de- thru the lint to the dying depart-

Home Economics Take Field Trip .

sociation, March, 30 and 31. This College students and other young' partment took a field trip to New ment. Here we saw hundreds of play will be the first to be pre- people seeking a way to explore Braunfels. Our first stop in the "cheeses" full of yarn in various sented in the new Mabee Student Eur~pe in depth and at the low~st city was the cotton mill. While we stages of dying. Our next stop was Center. Curtain time will be 8:00. possible cost have the opportumty were waiting for our guide we the room where the warp beams

The cast consists of Prior, played this summer. Offered are three browsed in the fabric store loca- are prepared for spinning. Did you by Mike Williams; Mrs. Clivden- choices of jobs with full back-up ted adjacent to the mill. Even this know there is a possibility of hav­Banks, Mindy Boyd; Duke, John service_ whil~ 0~ the job, a four- time proved educational because ing 4,000 threads running length­Paruzinski; Mrs. Midget, Cindi day orlenta!lon 10 London, and ~ll we were able to practice identify- wise in a fabric? After the beams ·vernon; Miss Lingley, Teresa Hill; documentabon and work permits ing weaves, finishes, and content of are prepared they are taken to the and Thompson, Doug Habbach. for only $129· fibers. Our guide arrived and we weaving room. Our guide told us

Assistant director is Laura Ad- This "S.ummer ~obs in Euro~e" began our tour. The tour started it would be noisy, but no one un-air, and Kathy Tomlin is &tage program IS organ~ed by Vacation in the back, where raw cotton is derstood how noisy. manager. Charles G. Taylor is the Work J.:td. based 10 •0 xf?rd,. E~g- brought in, in bales. The raw cot- The next step in the process is facluty sponsor. land, wdh a U. S. office 10 Cmcm- ton is put in machines where it finishing. There are several chem-

nati, _Ohio. The progr~ co~sul- is separated from the seeds and leal finishes which can be applied

TSEA Convention !~nt IS Ms. Myena Leith, . editor, cleaned. As you might expect, lint to the cotton cloth and gigantic

Summer E,~Pl?yment Dlrecton; is everywhere_ (My nose itches, machines are used for this. It is of th~ U. ~- With over 20 years just thinking about it.) Dacron is easy to tell when you're near one

The Shamrock Hilton Hotel in experience m the field of summer also mixed with the cotton at this of these machines because your Houston was the site of the 17th employment. Vacation ~ork staff point if it is to be a mixture. Next nose and throat burns and your Annual State Convention of the in En~land ~as been pla~mg young the cotton h: sent thru several tear ducts have a field day. Next Texas Student Education Associa. Amencans m summer JObs there carding machin«:s to make it smoo- the cloth is inspected for any tion. Delegates representing the fo~. the last four years. ther. If the cotton is to be clas- fiaws. Finally it is folded, cut Mary Hardin-Baylor TSEA organi- Once we accept a student on sified as. combed it is sent thru and packaged for sale. Cornel cot­zation were Vanny Bolsins, Bon- the pr~gram, we ~a~antee ~lac~; combing machines at this time. ton from this mill is sent out all nie Bone, Rilla Eproson, Sandy ment m one . of hiS JOb chOices, The cotton is wound into large over Texas and other states. Boales, and Rosalind Jones. Ac- states Ms. Le1th; "although place- loose "ropes" and. taken in barrels After a brief stop for lunch· we companing them was TSEA ad- ment can ?e ~ade t~rough . May, to the next process. After going visited a hoisery mill. (Every girl visor, Mrs. Edna Bridges. The early ap~hcatlons ~111 ,obvlou.sly thru several spinning processes should own one.) We saw nylon theme of the meeting which was get the .PICk ~f the JO?s. Salaried the fibers are finally classified as threads being spun into tllbular held March 1 through Ma~h 3 or volunteer JOb~ are •_n hotels! of- thread. , hose, which are then finished off

.------... -------. was "Accent on ~ofe,~sionalism- fices, archaelog~cal d1gs, agr1cul- . or sewn to ether to make panty-Responsible Teaching. tural camps family homes and oth- The next stop on our tour was h It . g . t ti g

Dates of Interest ti d er categori~s. Room and board are the testing lab. (We finally got a- ose. d•s a veryitm ereff~cln t.PAJ.ro-The conven on was cramme available in all cases. way from all the lint.) In the lab cess an seems qu e e I en •

,March 17 _ IJmer Space Cav- full of meetings, pan~ls, discus- .. . . we observed several machines te~ _the bos~ .~re ~ewn they,~ ,in-, ern ·Oeave BBrdY''·~at'.l..,..P:,m;); :;lllous;",lmcl~sp~'in~ se~sloos, . pte,.; program h!15 .. been.. ~~inl 'wbictdeste'cf'strengih Of Y8rn and···spected-for naws·and then·tiagged ·

March 24 _ Duplex Products, which were interesting and infor- strong,. poilits out Ms. Leit~. and fabric durability stretch and fine- for dying. An· interesting fact is, Temple Oeave Hardy at 9:15 mative to everyone. Those candi- we feel that it is · an ideal ex- ' ' ' out of three colors, red, yellow, and a.m.; will return by noon) dates who were running for state perience for serious, adventurous blue, over 27 shades can be de-

March 27 - Royal Academia office kept things lively with their students who want to meet people rived. A dozen hose are put in Open Hoilse (Temple Boys campaigning and generally speak- of other countries and see the Govemmenl each bag and 300 bags are dyed at Choir) tng, an air 1of getting things done real Europe." '!be combination of one time. (That's a lot of hose.)

March 31 - RA Spring Play prevailed throughout the conven- work, pleasure and new experien- GranfS Approved After two hours the hose are re-Day . tion's duration. ces is hard to beat. An unusual moved from the vats and dried.

April 7 - National Teachers Worthy of particular mention feature is ~bat a Vacation Work AUSTIN _ Two grants to the The hose are inspected again Examinations was entertainment provided by counselor is available at all times. d b C tr 1 T C and if any repairable snags are

April 14-21 - Spring Holidays Houston lSD, High School for the Students can receive~ fr:e "~urn- :~~~1 :~r~~ver~me~r:s. ~otal~::s$3:,: found, they are repaired with a April 28 - Graduate Records Performing and Visual Arts. The men Jobs in Europe roc ure 4150 were amon those a roved small rotating blade. Of course.

Examinations program titled "Black White and with details of available :lobs by b 'G D ~ h B 1

PP after I got thru trying to use one Creative Writing Workshop Brown" was • a co~pilation of sending a stamped return, bus- Y overnor o P r scoe. of those things, they'd really have (9 a.m. to 4 p.m.) music, dance, and drama showing loess-size envelope to Vacation The money wlll come from the to repair the hose. (If there was

May & - Trip to Waco - the very real feelings of the stu- Work Ltd., 226 Ludlow Ave., Cln- Criminal Justice . Council, which anything left to repair.) our last Browning Library and Ft. dents in an Inner city, tri-ethnic clnnati, Ohio 411220. administers the state's block grant stop on the tour was the room Fischer ,leave Hardy at 9:30 high school. from the Law Enforcement ABSis· where the hose are packaged, la-a.m.) The convention culminated on tance Administration under the beled, and boxed for malllng. If Interested In any of the Saturday with a noon banquet. ODD DAY II COMING Omnibus Crimo Control Act. Some of the people who went

above trips, Inquire in the Of· Special speaker was Mrs. Patsy Bell County wlll receive $19,41SO were Robin Murff, Rhonda Huston, flee of the Dean of Students. Duncan, TSTA president. to Initiate a personal ball-bond Georgia Brauner, Mickle Rose, and

:;;;;;~~;;;;;~=============~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-w~ro-~m~~~~~unw~~o~~~rev~~ who meet cortaln requirements McLean, Harriet Hess, Carol Roen,

hver•l w••k• ••• ••m• of tho mtmbtn of tit• MH·I Nunlng Club helped with tht ltloocl ,, te1t1 and donetlon• at the Towne and Ceuntrv .Mall. In Temple.

',,

may be released on personal bond Barba.ra House and Veronica Hop. while awaiting trial Instead of kina. We were accompanied by being jailed. Mrs. Beverly Hammond and Dr.

Persons accused of offenses in· Helen Ball, Chairman of the Homo volvlng narcotics (not Including Economics Department. marijuana), murder, rape, armed robbery or robbery by assnult wlll not be ellglblo for such release.

The project will be supervised by a governing board consisting of the judges of each of three district

Pre-School Program

courts serving the county and jud· On March 1 and Morch 8, tho goa of tho county court and county Physlcnl Education Majors conduc· court at low. County Judge Har· ted n program In Goodmnn Gym­old F. Harris wlll be project dlrec- nnslum from lO:ISO to 11:30 for tor. The county will provide a chlldt•en In the Mnry Hordln·Daoylor cosh motch of $300, In nddltlon Jlreachool. This provided the HPER to Its ln·klnd contribution. majors with an excellent lntrodue•

Central Tcxna COG, Dolton, was tlon to worklnll and tenehlng awarded $111,000 for continued younger chlldt•on, 1md tho chlldron al tolotypo network, which has wet•o cxpoaod to Rovorol phyalcal aupport of tho C.JC-fundod roglon· nctlvltlea which they enjoyed. boon In operation 18 months. Cash On mm·ch lat, tho ohlldt•on par· mntch from tho regional lnw en· tlclpnted In: .Jumphtll, Swlnglnll, fot•cement auonolos ualng tho HYI• nnd cllmblnll on ropes, Jumping tom will be $4,000. on the trnrnpollno, Wnlklng on tho

Countloa In tho region nro Doll, bnlnnco boam, nnd Dnlloon play. Coryell, Jlamllton, Lnmpnsaa, Ml· On March 8th, tho children par-lam, Mill• and Son Snbn. . tlclpnted In: Jlnrnchuto plny, Tum-

Tho Central Toxaa applications bllng nnd atunta, Dowling, and Ball wore nmonll 44, for funding or 2.0 Piny. million dollnra, oonaldcro!l by tho Dr. w. L. Ullla, auporvl•od the CJC Exeoutlvo Committee Fob, 18. prollt'ama.

PAGE 2 THE BELLS Tales of Fortunes and Taxes Which is BeHer?

Science Club Meeting By Ron Hendren

Ann Arbor, Mich. - a. P.) -Pass-fail grading does not appear to be this decade's cure-all for the problems of higher education. Un­iversity of Michigan psychologist Frank M. Koen conducted a broad study comparing the effects of pass·fail and traditional grading on 950 undergraduates. It produced, Prof. Koen reported "little conclu­sive evidence that either system is intrinsically superior in all re­spects."

the course than P-F students, al­though their estimated retention of subject matter was no greater," Prof. Koen reported.

"The P-F students tended to place somewhat more value on 'internal' rewards for learning, such as increased sense of personal competence, as opposed to the 'ex­ternal' rewards of grades and com­petition with their classmates. They also tended to profess a greater sense of autonomy and personal responsibility for success in the course, although these effects did not reach a statistically signifi­

Date: Thursday, March 15, 1973 Time: Refreshments 7:00 p.m.

Meeting ___ 7:30 p.m. Place: Wells Science Hall (3rd

floor) Topic: "Why the Mad-Hatter

was Mad" -Some Aspects of Environ­

mental Mercury Pollution

Speaker: Dr. Donald Jernigan, chairman, Chemistry Dept.

Topics of future meetings: "Death and Dying" "Birth, Life, and Death of

a Star" EVERYONE WELCOME!

WASHINGTON - A few days ago Senator Gaylord Nelson (D· Wise.) pointed out that the total sales of the corporations known as the Fortune 500 at the begin­ning of this decade exceeded by more than 200 per cent the total budget receipts of the U. S. gov­ernment in the same year, 1970.

He went on to point out that among the 100 largest "money powers" of the world, more than half are not countries at all, but corporations. It may profit the student in some

ways: toward a greater sense of au­tonomy, self-motivated learning, or a more collegial relationship with his professor. On the other hand, if the student's pass-fail transcript does not come from an academi­cally prestigious institution and he lacks other credentials, he may reduce his chances of being ac­cepted by a graduate school.

cant level." In terms of personal growth ~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The sales of Standard Oil of New Jersey, for example, exceed­ed by more ...than four times the total revenues received by the state whose name the company bore until recently when it chan­ged its name to Exxon.

"The choice of grading system is a far more complex matter than supporters of either approach have perceived," he concluded. "An in­dividual institution or department must decide which goals are most important for the students and choose the grading policy that is more likely to bring them about."

Prof. Koen tested 16 commonly made claims regarding the differ­ences in student performance, at­titudes and experience that may result from the traditional system or P-F grading. The students were tested on academic achievement early and late in the term. They also completed opinion question­naires at the beginning and end of their courses.

"Students in the traditional sec­tions did report spending signifi­cantly more time and effort on

(such as increased self-acceptance or social responsibility), develop­ment of intellectual skills (such as ability to interpret data and anal­yze relations), content acquisition and student • estimated learning and retention, Prof. Koen found no clear difference between the two grading .systems.

The pass-fail option can be viewed somewhat as an "unfam­iliar intellectual territory" for the student to explore, Koen noted. Al­though there have been assertions that those with higher ·grade point averages would prefer tradi­tional grading, he said, their past academic records proved to be of no relevance. Nor was grading po­licy found to influence a student's choice of major.

Students under the traditional system were more likely to regard their teachers as organizers, task setters and content experts, while P.F students tended to .see teach­ers as helpers and colleagues, These differences, hiwever, wer not strinking, Koen reported.

NWF Annual Environmental Awards

Authority Holds Public Meeting

The Brazos River Authority will sponsor a public meeting March 21 in Waco to discuss the study being undertaken to develop a basin-wide water quality manage­ment program for the Brazos River wa cershed and portions of the adjoining gulf coast area.

The meeting will be held at 2:00 p.m. in Waco's Convention Cen­ter.

Freshman Class News The Freshman class has recently Indeed, only 25 n.ations in the

voted to have an end of the year world have gross national products party. The party will be at Lake larger than the ~nnual sales of ~x­Belton, . Saturday, May 5, 1973. xon. The same, lS true of A.T.&r. Sack lunches for the party will be General Motors net sales put1 that provided for by the MH-B Dining company 24th from the top on Hall. March 12 has been set as the the same list. deadline for paying class dues. Close behind are Ford Motor Other fres~man act~vities include Company; Shell; Sears, Roebuck; . the upcommg elections f~r class General Electric; Internationai officers in April and the unpend- :Business :Machines· Mobile Oil· ing conclusion of freshman initia· Chrysler; and Int~rnational Tele: tion in the near future. phone and Tedegraph--(:ompanies

Colonel Walter Wells, General which are more powerful finan. Manager of the Authority, said cially than all but the largest 20 preliminary plans for the study, Sophomore Class or so countries in the world. developed in the past several Thursday, March 1, the Sopho- And yet, five of this nation's months, will be discussed and more class held . their monthly 45 largest corporations paid no suggestions and comments will be t' D · g the urse of the mee J:tg. urm co federal income tax whatsoever in sought from the general public. meeting, plans were discussed for 1971, the year of Nelson's compar-

The Authority was designated O:OD DAY! (OH you poor poor ison, even though these five com­by the Governor's Office more FlSh.) panies had taxable incomes to­than a year ago as the State Upon completion of their excit- tailing $382 million. Six more of agency to develop a program to ing, mysterious plans, the sopho- the 45 paid less than 10 per cent improve and protect the quality mores dismissed for lunch, spre{ld- tax in the sa~_.year, while the of surface water in the 45,000 ing rainbow love throughout the average rate for the rest of the square miles of the Brazos Basin campus. nearly two mlllion American cor-and adjoining areas of the gulf poratlons was 37 per cent.

Jack c. Watson of Big Pine Key, cently-retired U. S. Senator from coast. .._1

h Ch" ..._. · · Part of the problem is. thai Fla., has been named Conservation- New Mexico, for· his prominent ft p a I "8WS theiie giant conglomerates are so

·Colonel Wells said that inter- · 1 hi t ist of the Year by the three and national leadership and "outstand- Donna Drew, a jun or s ory big, so unwieidy and so ciiversi-one·half million member National ing dedication" to the principles of ested citizens and citizen groups, major from Copperas Cove, was fled that it has beim all btit 1m-

representatives of governmental · t f AI h · · Wildlife Federation. In other cat- conservation; for more than three agencies, representatives of in- recently elected presiden o P a possibte to reliulate them from the egorles, seven other individuals decades, Sen. Anderson has been dustries and business, farmers Chi, a national honor scholarship scanty 'ainount of tax information and organizations were also tapped a leader in natural resource leg- and ranchers and "all who may society on campu~. Other newly they are required to make public for thier outstanding environmen- lslatlon and an ardent advocate of be interested in good water" are elected officers include Sharon under present law. tal achievements. the preservation of parks and rec- invited to attend the meeting. Pavoggi, vice-president and Caro· Nelson has proposed legislation

Watson, refuge manager of Flor- reatlon areas; lyn Hall, secretary • treasurer. to remedy this situation by requir-lda's National Key Deer Wildlife Special Communications - In "In order to help assure that Sponsors of Alpha Chi are Dr. Iva ing the nation's 4,348 largest com-Refuge, was announced as a win· 1972, the PROVIDENCE JOUR- the final plan is responsive to M. Fussell, Mr. William Harlow, panies to disclose much more in-ncr of the anual· NWF award for NAL-BULLETIN which contributed the desires and needs of the and Miss Rachael LaRoe. formation about their corporate his "quarter of a century devotion two major efforts to make Rhode people throughout the planning income taxes, making public scru-to the recovery and maintenance Island a better environment in area," Colonel Wells said, "this SEEKING CHAMPIONSHIP No. 3 tiny possible for the first time. At of endangered species, particularly which to live and work • "Our public meeting has been schedu- Joe Leonard in his Samsonite that, his bill (S. 8715) would affect the key deer." The key deer, the Dirty Water", a two-part series of led to describe the study that is Special will be seeking his third only one • fourth of one per cent smallest deer in the U.S. faced vir- articles by staff writer Robert C. being undertaken to develop the consecutive National Champion· of American corporations, But tual extinction in 19151. The deer Fredericksen on the State's dis- basin-wide water quality mana.:c· ship in the United States Auto those 4,348 strongly affect if not now numbers about 15715, largely charge permit program and rcla- mont plan, to answer questions Club Championship (Indy) Divis- control the economics of this and due to Watson's efforts. Watson has ted pollution problems, and "Zap", concerning the study and the ion during the 1973 season. While many other countries. boon manager of Wildlife refuges the report of a unique and pioneer- plan and to offer an opportunity on the other hand, Butch Hart· The measure Ia sure to meet po­throughout southern Florida, in- lng clean-up of the Blackstone Rlv- for r,ubllc comment and suggest- man will be going after champion· werful opposition from business. eluding the Great White Heron and er; ions. ship number three in the Stock even though it would not directly Key West National Wildlife Rc- Special Posthumous - The Dlr· The plan will be developed and car Division nfter winnlnK the coat corporations so much as one fugcs, since joining the U. S. Bur- ector of the Michigan Dcpat•tment carried out in close cooperation title In 1971 nnd 1972. He won cent. Nonetheless, the dlsclolure eau of Sport Flshorlea and Wild· of Natural Resources, Dr. Ralph with the Texas Water Quality tho 1972 title without wlnnlnK a of key tax information Is certain life in 1946. A. MacMullan, who died in Scp- Bonrd, the Division of PlannlnK single race but by consistently to pose the threat of losing aome

Seven other major At-Largo tcmbcr, 1972; vigorous and dod· Coordination In the Governor's finishing the events that he rnn. of the tax loophole& which have nwards arc to be givon during the lcntcd, Dr. MacMullan was II noted Office, and the realonnl plannlnl Both drlvor11 are ontorod In tholr made It poaalble for buslneaaes to Mnreh 17 major banquet at tho conservation loader nnd was once naencles and local governments respective dlvlaions for the Texas ~rrow to lmmcnae alze without NWF's upcoming 37th Annual described by Governor Wllllam In the plannlnl aroa. All of those Twin 200's, . cnrrylnK their fair ahnro of tho Meeting, Mnrch 0·18, at the Wash· Mllllkon as "this man who did ngencies, together with other In· overall tnx burden. lngton, D. c. Hilton Hotol. More so much to preserve our natural tcrostcd Stat.e nnd Federal IIIICD· And when you are pre1ldent of than 1,000 conscrvntlonlsts, acton- roa

1 ourcc11, hfe wns hlmaolf ?,no of cloa have roprosontatlv

1os on a Plta~- USAJa1~~;!~t ~:i:~T wns nn 11 compnny - 1ay, General Motors

tlstll, 11nd key govel'llmcnt ofrlclals M chlgnn's lnest resources, i nlnll ndvlaory comm ttoo ea au- eatlmated $3.& million. Tho over· whoac 111le11 exceed the groaa nn-arc expected to nttend tho three- Intcrnntlonal - For his exhnus· ltahcd by tho Authority to help all payoff In tho Championship tlonal produota of Mexico, Sweden, day aoulon. tlng work nnd countless efforts In guide the plnnnlng effort andh as

11• Dlvlllon was $2,478,062 for nn tho Netherlands, Bel~rtum, Argontl·

The addltlonnl nwarda nrc ns quest of one world of cnvlronmcn· sure proper ooordlnntlon wit II nvorage of $869 por milo, an 1111· na, Romanln, and Switzerland, to follows: tal qunllty, Mnurlce Strolllr, the conccrnod. tlmo record. Mark Donohue waa name II few- then you havo a lot

Conaervntlon Communtcntlona- lnternntlonnlly-respcctod Exocutlvo o top money winner In the Indy. of clout Indeed to bring aaaln1t J.upl Saldnnn, the resourceful Out· nlrcctor of the u, N. Sccrotarlnt car ranks onrnlnll $2H,748. Total one aenntor and one mode1t pro-door Editor of the Los An.:oles for the, Environment nnd former New zoos nll over tho country puraea for tho Stock Car Divlalon po1al. So S. 875 II llkolr to fall. Tlmos tor hla lonfl·tlmc journalla· Sccretnty-Gcncrnl of the Stockholm nro cooping up tho people nnd lot· nmountod to $504,480 with Roger What peroontago of taxos will tic efforts In conservation, pnr· Confcrc.ncc on tho Human Envlr· tlng tho anlmnla run froe. Mov· MoC1u1koy pocketing ..,.,BM 111 )'OU be pnylng thla coming April nloularly In the nrcaa of tlah nnd onmont, lng away from tho trndltlonnl ays- top money wlnnor. 1D? wildlife; Snldnnn'a documontcd rc· Conacrvatlon Orgnnlzntlena - tom of dreary, crnmpod oagoa, In· porting haa given outllooramcn Tho Amcrlonn acoutlng movement atltutlons llko tho San Diogo ·zoo now proapeotlvca on tho rclntlon -The Nntlonnl Councils or tho nnd tho Bronx Zoo are plaolng a

tl Boy Scout11 nnd tho Girl Soouta of grantor omphnaia on the comfort r I I

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llot.wecn good eonRot•va on prnc· Amm·lcn for the tJ•omcndona job nnd woll·belng of tho anlmnll tlcoa and tho 11port1ng world; ,

Conaot·vntlon J.egiRlntlon - The thnt hoth orgnnlzntlonl continuo they keep, Jn addition, new com· I I \ ',

Jlonornhlo Clinton P. Andcraon, rc· to do In orontlng nn nwnrenoll for morclnl nnlmal pnrkl are capital· youth of conHcrvnUon nnd nnturnl 111ng on thl• arrangement, offer- PubUahed wnktv 1t Marv H•rdln•llvtor CoUege 11 1 plrt of ·

, I ,J /r ... ' .

WANTIDI II Chi Cho ltottiU• r•nt naoda atudont(a) for ,.rt.tlme htlp In tho ovt• nlntlo Cont11t Mr. CHk It .,., .. , .. .,,

rcaouroo need•. lng drive-through toura of tho the atudent lctlvltv. Return ~ltiCII guer1ntltd. . · For ntldltlonnl Information on nnlmal11' own territory, Reault of l!ntered It tlie p01t Office In lllton TtKII ·II IICOnd-ctau

t11o NWF ·awnrclR for 111711, oontnot thl• now approach, 111)'1 tho March m•tter under the Act of March B 1873, ' ' tho Nntlonnl Wildlife Fodorntlon, SCIENCE DIGEST, la more inter· ' 8 ., ... ,, Attn: Dcnnla Jlnnaon, 14111 Six· o1t1ng nnlmnl watching, happier Editor ---·-··-·--·-··.....;...~.--·--"·---- Ulln - " toonth Stroot, N. w., Wn•hlngton, nnlmnla, nnd bettor brooding or A11l1t1nt Edltore 8h1U1 Alcht,daon, Vonle Hopllln1 D. c. 110086 (1102-4B3·1DDO) endnnuercd 1paclo1 ln capUvUy, Bua1n111 M1n1ger -· ~- Janice Andrew•

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Shirley Temple Black Named Chairman of National Wildlife Week

Shirley Temple Black, former child star and Special Assistant to the Chairman of the Presi· dent's Council on Environmental (luality, has been named Honor· ary Chairman of National Wild· life Week for 1973. Mrs. Black bas been very active in public service in recent years, serving as a delegate to the United Na· tions and leading the fight against the crippling disease multiple sclerosis. She has also been par­ticularly involved in U. S. en­~ronmental affairs.

In October 1972, Mrs. Black ac­~ompanied CEQ Chairman Russell 'Train and NWF Executive Vice President Tom Kimball with the U. S. Delegation to Moscow for .Soviet - Am.erican environmental 11egotiations. She also served with 1he u. -S. Delegation to the pre­~edent-setting U. N. Conference

, on the Human Environment held in July 1972, in Stockholm, Sweden.

This year, National Wildlife Week is set for March 16-18. Sponsored each year by the 3lf.z million member National Wildlife ~ederatioil and its state adiiiates, the 1973 Wildlife Week emphasis is on wildlife management and the theme of 'Discover Wildlife -It's Too Good To Miss!". The symbol of 1973 Wildlife Week is an infant wood duck shown just emerging from its nest.

During this year's observance, Kimball urges families to "get out and enjoy our wild resour­ces. It can open up an entirely new world." "Too often," Kimball said, "American families see wild· life and the rest of the natural world only through attractive magazine pictures. It's out there to be experienced right now and it really is too good to be miss­ed."

Famed wildlife naturalist and 1olWF Art Director, Dr. Roger Tory Peterson will also give one of his renowed film presentations on wildlife throu~bout tlie world;

Besides ttie 1972 Conservation Awards for outstaridliig envirOn-

mental achievement being given at the major banquet on Satur­day, March 17, a major address will be made by the noted Execu­tive Director of the U. N. Secre­tariat for the Environment, Cana­dian Maurice Strong. Also on hand will be former child star Shirley Temple Black, the Honor ary Chairman of "1973 National Wildlife Week" and Special As· sistant to the Council on Environ­mental Quality, and television personality Arthur Godfrey.

In addition to the NWF Annual Meeting plans, the Federation is using this opportunity to dedicate the recently-completed NWF Lau· rel Ridge Conservation Education Center in Vienna, Va. On hand for the March 16 dedication of the new 20-acre nature center will be a host of U. S. Senators and Representatives, State of Virginia authorities, and leading government environmental offi­cials, including Interior Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton and Agricul­tural Secretary Earl Butz.

Tours of the newly-developed natural area will be provided as well as todrs of D. c. and the U. S. Bureau of Sport Fisheries and Wildlife's Patuxent Research Labortory, which houses a large stock of whooping cranes, bald eagles, and other critically-en­dangered species.

For information on how to at­tend the NWF Annual Meeting, write the National Wildlife Fed­eration, 1412 16th Street, N. W., Washington, D. C. 20036.

"'" MA 1pa~ ezplonr.ll a fe.l· low drlVbJI aio1111d . dowu• to~ lookla& for a place to park."

EASTER PAGEANT Plans are being made for the Easter Pageant. The casting com­mittee Is meeting and people are beglng considered for various parts. If you are Interested In a role or being on a committee, please fill out this form and drop It In the campus mailbox:

Name

EASTER PAGEANT MH-B, Box 343 Campus

---------·-····-----···----- .. ------------Address ---.. --···-·---·--··-·--··---·-- Phone -··------

:Jasslflcotlon ------···-·------·-----·-·------

MH-B Tennis Team in Action

March 12, 1973 THE BELLS

NWF Meeting Plans Announced This will be a busy week for Plans for the 37th Anual Meeting (Wash.), Dr. James C. Fletcher.

the men and women on the MH· of the largest private conservation NASA Administrator, Chairman BC intercollegiate tennis team. It organization in the world, the Na· Russell E. Train of the President's is hoped that everyone can come tional Wildlife Federation, are set Council on Environmental Quality, out and watch our teams in action for March 16-18 at the Washington· and the Administrator of the En­at home against Temple Junior Hilton Hotel, Washington, D. C. vironmental Protection Agency, College on Tuesday, March 13. With the 1973 emphasis on "Land William D. Ruckelshaus. The Men will begin play at 2:00 Use and Related Energy Prob· Set to give a visual panorama and the women will start at 4:00: lems," over 1,000 of the NWF's 3 of a classic case study of human

On Monday March 12 the men and lf.z million members are ex· land use is Everest Climber and travel to Seg~in for a ~atch with pected to hear some of the world's cultural ecologist Barry Bishop. Texas Lutheran. The following day, leading environmenta~i~ts and top Bishop is formerly a leading pbo­our teams will play at home again· U. S. government off1c1als. tographer with the National Geo­st the Tjc men and women. The Scheduled to give an overview graphic Society and is now on MH-BC girls meet the Southwes· of the government's role in o'ur its research and exploration staff. tern squad in Georgetown in what nation's energy and land use pro· According to NWF President N. should be a very exciting match, blems are Sen. Henry Jackson A. Winter, a "dynamic panel" of and the toughest competition the energy experts bas been lined up ladies have faced thus far in the W Jd y 8 t• to discuss our current energy pro-season. Thursday, the men travel ou ou e .leve blems and the long-term alterna-to Blinn College in Brenham for tives. Former White House energy a dual meet. $1 1 02 750 00' advisor and current Director of

It is going to be a full week of 1 1 • • the Ford Foundation's Energy tennis for the young squad from Commission Chairman Dr. Dixy MH-BC. These young men and \vo. When the smoke has cleared Lee Ray, ex-Interior Secretary and men, who are all freshmen, are following the April 7 Texas Twin NWF Board Member Stewart L. gaining experience and improv- 200's at the Texas World Speed· Udall, Eli Goldston, President of ing their skills for bigger arid bet- way, the economy of Bryan/Col- Eastern Gas and Fuel Associates, ter things to come. Come and lege Station will have been boost- and Mark Roberts, Harvard Pro­watch a while on Tuesday and sup- ed by an estimated $l,lD2,750· fessor of Economics. port our men and women tennis Hard to belfeVe,~tsn•t it. players. Go get'um Mary Hardin- A predicted 50,000 out-of-town Baylor! Beat TLC, TJC, Southwes- guests are expected to almost tern, and Blinn! double the population of this nor- South Africans

Triumph in n New Record Set College Station - Former Indi­

anapolis 500 winner, Mario An­dretti has erased the unofficial world's clot;ed course speed record at the Texas World Speedway with a new record speed of 211.-765 miles-per-hour.

. Driving a new turbo-charged, Offy.powered Mark n Parnelli, Andretti circled the two-mile, high-banked oval with an elapsed time of 34 seconds flat to break tbe old record of 208.692 set by Gordon Johncock at the same track.

The car designed · by Maurice Phillippe looked like a low flying ~et as it came screaming off of turn two and down the long back­stretch.

Andretti said following the rec­ord run, "The car hail4led beau­tifully and really sticks to the track at high speeds. I think we can run even a little faster, it's ;lust a matter of changing a few minor adjustments on the car."

When asked what speed he pre­dicts it will take to win the pole position for the upcoming Texas Twin 200's, se · said, "It's bard to say, maybe 212 miles-per-hour, We'll be running in excess of 200 mUes.per-hour in competi­tion."

Marlo Andretti will return to Texas World Speedway when qualifying activities begin for the Texas Twin 200's scheduled for Saturday, April 7.

mally quiet domain. Not only will they witness the fastest auto­mobile race in the sport's history but leave behind the largest sum Although Asians are usually of money ever spent in this area victorius in table tennis, or ping-for a single sports event. pong, as we Americans are prone

Approximately $600,000 will be to call it, the tournament at Mary spent for he ·purchase of tickets Hardin-Baylor was dominated by for the race, souvenirs and con- the South African Contingent of cessions at the track. Local motel Gold and Trogolo . owners will receive around $76,- Roberto Trogolo bested Ronald 500 for rental of the 850 rooms Fulton in the singles tournament. in town and another $200,000 can The pre-tournament favorites, ·Bo~ be deposited by proprietors of by Johnson and Jerry Bevers ihe local restaurants. Of the 15,- (winners of last year's tournament) oOo ·automobiles that will trans- were ousted in the semi-finals and port visiting race f~s to ~ryan/ Trogolo overpowered and outsllck­College Station, an estunated ed Fulton with a devastating fore-5,000 are expected to make at hand attack tc:i win the hamburger least one "Pit. Stop", takirig on prize for first place. some . 7,500 gallons of fuel at an In doubles, Jurca and Prater average of thirty-five cents per and Collazo-Fulton were elimina­gallon. This will . keep most serv- ted early setting the stage for the ice stations attendants busy ;lust hampio~ hlp match between Tro-fllling the cash registers with an c s estimated $26,000. And that figure golo-Gold versus Bevers.Johnso~. doesn't even include cigarettes, Each team took a game before the soft drings, candy, fixing flats South African duo came on strong and other miscellaneous items for a decisive 21-14 that game and that contribute to the service sta- the victory was theirs. tlon owner's economic status. Other local merchants can divide an additional $200,000 that the race fans will part with for such thinGs as fllin, picnic • supplies, alcoholic beverages, sun glasses, alka-seltzer and anything else that is necessary of 'race-watch· ing",

And ;lust think! It happens again on June 10.

ALL MATERIALS to be placed In THE BELLS, muat be turned In NO LATER then any Wed· ne1dey before the paper the article Is to ep,eer In, com11 out. The 1rtlcl11 muat be typed end ahould be mailed to P. o. Box 538,

Your Opinion May Be Worth a $1,000 Scholarehip In Reed & Barton'•

"SILVER OPINION COMPETITION" During the months of February and March, Reed & Barton, America's oldest

malor sllversmltha, ore conducting a "Sliver Opinion Competition" In which volu· able scholarahlpa totalling $2,500 ore being offered to duly enrolled women students at a few selected colleges and universities.

Mary Hardin-Baylor College has been •elected to enter this competition In which the Flr•t Grand Award 11 a $1 ,000 lcholar•hlp, Second Grand Award Is a $500 acholorshlp, Third Grand Award Is a $300 scholorahlp, and Seven Grand Awards of $100 each scholarship•. In addition, there will be 100 other awards conalstlng of sterling allver, fine china and crystal with a retell value of op· pro~Cimately $85.00

In the 1973 "Sliver Opinion Competition", on entry form llluatratea twelve dealgna of sterling with eight dealgn• of both china and cryatol. The entrants almply IJ1t the three beat comblnatlona of aterllng, chino and cryatol from the pattern• Jlluatreted. Scholarahlpa and ewarda will be made to those entrltl match· lng or coming cloaet to the unenlmoua aeleetlona of Toble·Stttlng edltora from three of the netlon'• leedlng megezlntl,

Mill Ll1o Whitt Ia the Student Reprtlentetlve who Ia conducting the "Sliver Opinion Competition" for Reed & Berton et MH·B, Thole lntereated In entering 1he "Silver Opinion Competition" 1hould contact Mill White at 205 Stribling for entry blenk1 end for complete detail• concerning the competition rulea. She el1o hea umple• of 12 of the moat popular R11d & Barton dealgna 10 that entrant• can 111 how 1he1e 1terllng pattern• actually look,

Through the opinion• on allver design, t1Cprea1ed by college women com· petlng for the11 acholer1hlp1, Reed & Barton hopea to compile 11 valuable library of e»eprenlona of young American t11t1,

JLLL&IMAIIFAiiiiCMWIJJI Hiiiili- &&d&lftiJAIIImriiHtn:JJUZIIIJh

when you call -t2~'-ts5!S0 toll -free,.

AcnON Is a Qrowtna movell'l6nt of volunteers out to help people holp themselves, lt'a the Peeco Corpacmd VISTA, helping peoplo · overseas and rlgbt down the at reel. Ple1110 don't croW! Wlder A rock. Oot Into ACl'ION today, 41\\

Advertlelnl contrlbut•d tor the public aood, W,.

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••a• 4 THE BELLS

NWF Sues Ar111y Corps for Building ''Toilet'' on Virginia River

W!IIIJIF v AU aa.- rwrm

·Dr. Kissinger's Visit to Asia Following is documentation on DRVN side and the U. S. side had

the visit to Asia of Dr. Henry A. frank, serious and constructive ex­Kissinger, Assistant to the Pres- changes of views on the implemim­ident for National Security Af. tation of the agreement on ending

tories have undertaken.

The National Wildlife Federation and three other conservation or· ganizations have joined in a suit to halt construction on a $47 mil­lion Virginia dam which the Army Corps of Engineers is building to flush away industrial pollutants. Besides the planned construction of the State's most productive wildlife refuge and a sizeable stretch of a free-flowing, white-· water river, the NWF argues that justification for construction of the dam is based on cost standards "which were outdated in the 1950's."

The two sides welcomed the discussions between the two South Vietnamese parties for the purpose of carrying out the provisions con­cerning self-determination in South Vietnam, in accordance with the­stipulations of the Paris Agreement on Vietnam.

dam. And, if they drop their fairs, reprinted from the "Weekly the war and restoring peace in •water quality' disguise,. we get Compliation of Presidential Docu- Vietnam which was signed in Paris only 50 cents back." ments": on January 27, 1973, as well as

Besides the NWF the other - Text of the U. S. - Democra- post-war relations between the De- The Democratic Republic of Viet­conservation groups ' involved in tic Republic of Vietnam Joint mocratic Republic of Vietnam and nam and the United States de­the suit are the Virginia Wildlife Co~muniq~e Follo.wing Dr. Kis~in- the United States aDd other sub- clared that the full and scrupu­Federation, the Environmental De- ger s Meetmgs With North V1ct- jects of mutual ~oncern. Special lous implementations of the Paris fense Fund and Campaign for namese Leaders: February 14, Advisor Le Due Tho and Dr. Kis- Agreement on Vietnam would pas­Clean Wate;. 1973; singer also held discussions in a itively contribute to the cause or

Games the Government Plays

YOU'RE BLUFFING

- Text of the U. S. - People's continuation of their meetings peace in Indochina and Southeast Republic of China Communique which took place in Paris during Asia on the basis of strict respect Following Dr. Kissinger's Meetings the past four years. In addition to for the independence and neutral­with Chinese Leaders: February these working sessions, Dr. Kissin- ity of the countries in this region. 22, i973,· and d h' t · · d ger an IS par y VlSlte a number The two sides reaffirmed that.

- Text of the News Conference of points of interest in Hanoi. the problems existing between the-

In summing up the Federation's position, Tom Kimball, NWF exec­utive vice president, said that "the Corps has better things to do than make industrial toilets of our re­maining scenic rivers."

of Dr. Kissinger at the White The two sides carefully ;reviewed Indochinese countries should be House: February 22, 1973. the implemen'tation of the Paris settled by the Indochinese parties.

Inter-Office Memo Dr. Kissinger's Meetings In Hanoi Agreement on Vietnam in the re· on the basis of respect for each re: Washington, D. C., model U. S. • Democratic Republic of Viet- cent period. They discussed var- other's independence, sovereignity-

school integration plan. nam Joint Communique Following ious imperative measul'es which and territorial integrity, and non-There seems to be a small dif- Dr. Henry A.. Kissinger's Meetings should be taken to improve and interference in each other's inter-

ficulty in our program. With North Vl•tnamese Leaders. expedite the implementation of the nal affairs. They welcomed the NOW DON'T PANIC. Forced in- February 14 1973 t 1 , agreemen , and a so agreed that negotiations between the parties.

C t t. f th t tegration hasn't worked anywhere D H A Kis · th ld t' t h · ons rue 1on o e con rover- r. enry . smger, Assis- ey wou con mue o ave per1o- in Laos, which are intended to . G h . J yet, but in theory it's Foolproof. t t t th p 'd t f d' h f · · s1al at nght Dam on the ackson an o e res1 en o the United 1c exc anges o VIews m order to produce a peaceful settlement in.

It's just that we started with st t · d · th River near Covington, Virginia, · a es, arrive m Hanoi on Febru- ensure at .the agreement and its that country. has been justified by the Corps as S7% Black enrollment and now, ary 10, 1973, and left Hanoi on protocols are strictly and scrupu-providing "water quality improve- after our program, we have 91%- February 13, 1973. He was accom- lously implemented, as the signa- (Continued Next Week) ment" - - - flushing industrial - panied by Mr. Herbert G. Klien, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .. wastes down the southwest Vir- Director of Communications for ginia stream. In its November 30 PASS THE DEAL the Executive Branch, Ambassador comments on the dam to the wARNING: BAN! William H. Sullivan, Deputy Assis-

BSU CALENDAR OF EVENTS - 1973 Corps, however, the Environment- :MERCURY FOUND IN FISH tant Secretary of State, and other al Protection Agency strongly re- DO NOT EAT BANNED FROM American officials. Apr. 20-22 International Student Conference -

Palestine, Texas commended that a better altema- MARKET During his stay in Hanoi, Dr. tive would be for the industry in- OOPS! SORRY ... Fish caught Henry A. Kissinger was received May 21-30 volved-in the main, a pulp mill near 34 years ago and just analyzed by Premier Pham Van Dong, Spec·

Mexico Mission Trip - Valle Hermoso, Mexico

Glorieta Student Week - Glorieta, New Mexico Covington - to treat its own contain twice as much mercury as ial Advisor Le Due Tho, and Vice Aug. 15-20 wastes. The EPA report pointed out fish do today. Remains of fish Premier Nguyen Duy Trinh. The that treatment of the waste would that lived 1500 years ago indicate :..:.==-=.:::::::.:::._:=:._:::_::~=_!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ be less than half as expensive and considerably 1 e s s destructive Waste treatment by the industry would also eliminate the tremen­dous construction costs to the pub-

mercury levels in oceans have not .---------------------------------------~ substantially increased.

WARNING: BAN!

He. • DDT HARMFUL TO ANIM.AI..f?!

"Even after they received these Use Restricted by Federal Gov­recommendations," Kimball stated, ernment! BANNED BY SEVERAL "the Corps was going ahead and STATES! building the dam." According to OPPS! SORRY • • World Kimball, the Corps' own statement Health Organization announced on the project admitted that the that DDT spraying in Ceylon' cut dam will drown Virginia's most malaria cases from 2.8 million in productive wildlife refuge and 12 1916 to 110 cases in 1961. The miles of the beautiful, rushing banning of DDT in Ceylon bas Jackson River. resulted in malaria returning to

The Gathright Wildlife Manage. ment Area is scheduled to be in·

2.5 million people (1968-69).

undated by the back-up from the CARD SHARK dam. According to information 1964 _ from the Interior Department and With money and innovative the Virginia Commission of Game ideas, the Office of Economic Op. and Inland Fisheries, the refuge is portunity will totally eliminate the most fertile wildlife habitat in poverty by 19'70 the entire state. '·B,?sides destroy- Solving poverty 1s simple: You ing the refuge area, Kimball said, take from the 'haves' and give "the Corps doesn't even have any to the 'have-nota'. plans to replace it with another 1971 _ area." We took $18 BILLION from the

"The monetary standards that 'haves' they're using to justify the so-call- As a matter of fact, In just ed 'benefits' of the dam went out 1971 (along with State and local in the 1950's" Kimball argues "If agencies) we took $170 BILLION they included environmental ~osts for related social-welfare pro-

grams. and used current money values, We now have one person in tho public would realize that wo every eight living In poverty are gottlnll only 73 cents back on about tho samo as when we start: every dollar we spend to build this od.

~

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HOMI WORK OPPORTUNITIII lox 292

Ruidoso, New Mexico 11141

Compliments of

GOLDEN'S BOOT & SHOE SHOP 209 E. Central

·BEL TON, TEXAS

Mary Hardin-Baylor College TRAFFIC REGULATIONS

VISITORS: PLEASE NOTE No. 16-18

1. The maximum speed on the MH-B campus Is 20 MPH at all time. 2. All streets on campus are one-way except from the back of Hardy on the

north slde of campus to College Ave, on the east side of the campus. WARNING: Bicycles and emergency vehicles with special authorization are not restricted to one-way streets and pedestrians are not restricted to cross­walks. These all have the right-of-way at all times. le prep•recl to atop.

3. The MH-B campus Is closed after curfew. Every car on campus after curfew should have a valid student or faculty-staff permit.

4. Do not park In no-parking zones at any time. Do not block traffic. 5. All regulations will be enforced. Transcripts and graduation will be held up

for nonpayment of fines and registration will be blocked. 6. Any car without a ·permit will have Its license number traced through the

Highway Patrol upon receiving a citation. 7. Students may be held responsible for violations of nonstudent relatives

and nonstudent dates. . B. Traffic citations during the first week of each semester and your first regu·

lar citation In most cases will be considered as a warning only. Second VIolation ----------$ 2.50 Third VIolation ---·------ 5.00 Fourth VIolation -------------·--- 10.00 Fifth VIolation ------.. ·---·-·----- Discipline Committee

9. Payment of fines must be made within ten (10) days of violation. Bring your citation with you.

10. late charge of $1.00 per week per violation will be added after the first ten days from the date of the citation until arrangements for payment have been made.

11. Any citation on a car with an Invalid, current MH·B Parking Permit will be considered a double violation.

12. All violations charged to one person for ell reasons In any number of automobiles will be cumulated for the entire traffic ,year, June 1, to May 31.

The following reguletlons apply 1100 a.m. to 1100 p.m. Monclay through Prlday except 1ehool hollcl•ys. 13. All cars P.arklng on campus should have a valid MH·B Parking Permit

P.ermanently* attached on the ln,lde bottom left corner of the rear wind­shield. (Convertibles and station wagons should use the back portion of the left side window. Other special cases should check with the Dean of Students Office.)

*Temporary permits are used for visitors and special purposes only. 14. Cars without permits should be parked off campus until e ~rmlt can be

obtained, or temporary permlulon should be obtained from the patrolmen on duty.

15. Faculty and staff should park In designated feculty•staff parking areas only (numbered yellow curbs).

16. Students and visitors with permits may park In any unrestricted parking area. 17. VIsitors should obtain a parking permit from the Dean of Studenta Office,

Registrar, or Bookstore. 18. Vlslton may park In dealgnated ereaa up to 30 minutes without a permit. 19. Areas marked "SP.eclal" are reaerved for orthopedically handicapped stu•

dents' vehlcl11 with special permit attached, . 20. Every year, any student who reglater for three or more houra at MH·B

may receive their flrat parking permit free of charge, Additional permits may be purchaaod for one dollar (1,00) each, After reglatratlon permanent permits should be obtained from the office of the Dean ef ltudentt, third

floor, Mabee Student Center, ·

FIFTY-SIXTH YEAR

ht runn•r·UP-Ttrrl Pyke Mill IGA

MARY HARDIN-BAYLOR COLLEGE, BELTON, TEXAS, MARCH 19, 1973 No. 20

Sharon Pavoggi - New Miss MH-B The 1973 Miss Mary Hardin-Bay­

lor Scholarship Pageant is now a part of history. After all the hard work, long hours, and tears on the part of contestants and committees, the Pageant has ended. Bll;t its end­ing marks the beginning of the reign of the new Miss MH-B, Sha­ron Pavoggi. Miss Pavoggi, who re­presented Historical Phila Society, is a 19 year old Junior, Health and Physical Education major from El Paso. For her talent in the pageant she performed on the balance

the Regalions and says she fell in love at the age of 5 when she dis­covered music. As her talent pre­sentation, Jennifer chose to sing "Sweet Inspiration."

The third runner up was Miss Sandy Wheeless, representing Johnson Dorm. She is a 20 year old Behavorial Science major from Taylor, Texas. For her talent pre­sentation she sang "I Am Woman." She is a member of the Regalions and was one of the top ten Semi­finalists last year. Some of her favorite things are sewing, ping­pong, cooking and camping.

beam, uneven parallel bars and· did . . . . Fourth Runner Up was Linda

floor gymnas~Ics .. She IS active m 1\Ioore, Miss Alpha Mu Gamma. Lin­~everal orgamzatlons at MH-B .and da is a 20 year old nursing major Is . an hon,or student. Sh~ thmks from Temple. She is a sophomore bemg ?ne ~ self an~ makmg peo- and attended Temple Jr. College ple .sm~le IS a very Important ~ac- her freshman year. After gradua­tor m bfe. . . . . tion Linda plans to work with.emo-

_In July of this year Miss. Pavoggi tionally disturbed children. For her ~Ill repr~sent Mary Hardm-Bay~or talent, Linda presented an original m_ the M1ss .Texas Pageant which comedy monologue based on the 'Will. be held m Fort Worth.. . Lilly Tomlin character of Edith

Frrst Runner Up was Terri Fyke, Ann. a 19 year old Sophomore from Dal-hart. She is an Elementary Educa- The top ten list was completed tion major and plans to teach ele- by Lyn Thompson, Miss Alpha Chi; mentary school or kindergarten Cheryl Moore, Miss Burt Dorm; after graduation. She is a member Linda Glass, Miss Mu Eta Beta Fra.

talent, Betty Davis did an original m0dern jazz dance to the tune "Wake Up Sunshine."

A very profes=ional job of direct­ing was done by 1\Iiss Carolyn Tice, a junior from El Paso. She was as­sisted by Dee Doughty, nssistant director; and Nancy Irvin, back­stage director; along with numer­ous committee chairmen and workers.

Yes, the 1973 Miss Mary Hardin­Baylor Pageant is over but the new Miss MH-B and her court can truly say "We've Only Just Begun ... ,.

---·0---Benjamin Franklin designed a

dollar made of silver, brass and pewter, bearing the motto, "Mind Your Own Business," and minted in 1776.

··,.,~·.9~·.,~tJ!~4'.~-AA.¥ons. 'liJJ~:;..?!f!-~*d.;·J~rm~;:~lor~,;!tfatts9.~ •. ,~s.l'loYal .. ·~:: runner UP· in . file"illi72· ·Miss MH·B Academia; . and Betty DaVis; -Mis~r· ·

2nd runnor-uP-Jtnnlfor Jordan Mill Phi Alpha Theta

Pageant For her talent presenta- Stribling Dorm. Lyn Thompson tion, Terri sang a medley from presented a dramatic reading, "Ode "Fiddler on . the Roof" which was to a Contemporary Bunkshooter" composed of "Fiddler on the Roof", for her talent and Cheryl Moore "Matchmaker", and "H I Were a did an original modern jazz dance Rich Man". to the music "Promises, Promises."

Second Runner Up was Jennifer Linda Glass presented a dramatic Jordan, Miss Phi Alpha Theta. Jen· reading entitled "Our Flag" and nifer is a 19 year old Sophomore Gloria Mattson did a scene presen- 3rd runner-up - S•ndy Wh11lt1S from Houston. She is a member of tatlon from "Plaza Suite." For her Ml11 John•on Dorm

4th runntr•up.-Lind• Moore Ml11 Alpha Mu Gamma

Mill Royal Academia Gloria Matt1on

Ml11 Mu Ita Beta Linda Gl111

Self-Protection Lecture Topic Lecturer Jl'redorle Stornakn will

proaent n Pl'ogram titled "To Do or Not To Do Rnpod" March 22 at 7:30 p.m. ·1n Wnlton Chapol at Mary Unrdln-Unylor Collogo,

A part of tho oollogo art aorloa, Mr. Storn&ltn'a tnlk denla with tho art of provontlng PHIIPUita on women. Jlla program which Ia do· algnod to oducnto nnd propnl'O womon for nny pn11alblo confrontP· tlon with l'npo Ol' naanult hna boon woll rocolvod throughout tho Unl· tad Stntoa, 1-lll outltnndlnll aonao

of humor onnbloa open tllscuiBion of this touchy subject,

lntoroatod apoolflcnlly In abnor· mnl nnd aoclnl payohology, Mr. Stornskn Ia Involved In problema nnd solution• to juvonllo dolln· quoncy nnd hna dono roacnrch In Now York, Wnahlnaton nnd aov· ornl aouthcrn cltloa whore hla knowledge of payoholally nnd J<nrnto hnvo boon lnvnlunblo ole· menta ln working with young adulta,

Tho Mnroh IJII program nt Mll·D Ia opon to tho publlo,

Mitt ~lpha Chi l.yn Thompton

Mill ltrlbllng Dorm ltttv Davit

Ml11 Burt Dorm Cheryl Moore

; ,. (.

I. ,. I ... L

. ,:J ; ' ·~ '• ':1

. i I

... I

Page 2

guest

THE B.ELLS March 19, 1973

comment:

THERE'S ALWAYS A PRICE FOR SECURITY

By Arch N. Booth Executive Vice President

Chamber of Commerce of the United States

Donna Drew To Present Paper in Mo.

Donna Drew, a Mary Hardin· 1 have a friend whose experiences might interest you. He's Baylor College history student

one of those rugged, outdoor types who spend a lot of time in from Copperas Cove, will present the wilc;:ls, hunting game. You know the kind ·- irregular hours, a paper at the national convention independent, always catting around. of Alpha Chi, national honor

The life had its risks. He was a purist. He'd go off into the scholarship society, in St. Louis, woods and live only on what he could kill, going hungry if the Mo., March 22-24. hunt was unsuccessful. Nevertheless, I doubt that the idea of The paper, titled "The Funda­changing his life style ever entered his head. mentalist Counter-attack of the

But there were others who did give some thought to it. For 1920's: A Historiographical View" one thing, they disapproved of hunting and really couldn't find was approved for inclusion on the much redeeming social value in his behavior. For another, they program by the national council. were horrified at the thought that he might go hungry or suffer Dr. Jesse G. Carnes, vice presi­from a lack of medical attention or from inadequate housing. dent of the council recently noti-

My friend wasn't interested. He seemed not even to under- fied Miss Drew of the acceptance. stand what they were talking about. . The study deals with various

Unfortunately, it is a characteristic of the morally self-nghteous historians' interpretations of the that they won't take no for an answer. Fundamentalist crusade that had

So it wasn't long until an effort was organized to secure for as one of its aims the passage of my friend these "rights" which he evidently valued rather lightly. state anti-evolution laws. She con­The reasoning was that he had been raised in a poor environment, eludes that historians have gen­where he was deprived of the opportunity to learn the proper erally treated the movement in outlook. Put him in a proper environment, find him a useful job, an unfavorable light, blaming it restore to him his unclaimed "rights", and he'd settle down and for denominational splits, purg­come to appreciate his benefactors. ing of seminary faculties and divi-

They made him an offer he couldn't refuse. He has a steady sion of Protestant groups into job now. He keeps regular hours. He never has to worry about liberal and conservative camps. where the next meal is coming from. He has a warm, safe, dry Miss Drew is a member of Phi place to live. And he gets free medical care at public expense. Alpha Theta honor society in His-

Does he appreciate it? I'm not sure. I've neyer asked him, tory, Alpha Mu Gamma fraternity, because I suspect that if he replied at all it would be with an the Baptist Student Union, Royal angry growl. . Academia Society and is current-

You might ask him yourself sometime. You can fmd him, ly serving as president of Alpha most days, pacing back and forth behind the bars of the tiger Chi fraternity's MH-B chapter. cage, down at the zoo. Dr. Mildred Fussell, faculty ad-

-------o------ visor to Alpha Chi, will accom­

A Good Time Was Had By All more powerful than cabinet mem­bers who already must get the legislative blessing in order to sit on the throne.

The Administration objected, of course, and that is what brought Roy Ash to the Hill the other day. His first line' of defense was that he had no operational powers like department heads, no power at all, in fact, except .as an agent of the President carrying out administra­tion policies.

After the snickers died down, Rep. Chet Holifield (D-Calif.) po­litely disagreed with Ash's own as­sessment of his power,. and allow­ed as how it seemed pretty clear to him that control of the purse strings Involved considerable oper­ational duties.

By Ron Hendren Rep. .John .J. Rhodes (R-Arlz.) then contributed his belief that

pany Miss Drew to the conven­tion.

Stephenl• Berrett Mlu Congenl•lltv WASHINGTON · Roy L. Ash, di- Congress ought not to pass the bill

rector of the President's Office of "In a nt or pique" over Mr. Nix- M'ISS (ongen'lal'lly Management and Budget, came up on's Impoundment activities. No to the hill the other day to try to points: very weak rejoinder. Named convince House members that his All in all everybody's tongues

"I can't believe I went thru the whole thing." Jennifer Jordan expresses delight at the final curtain of the 1973 Miss MH-B Pageant.

Aftermath of the Pageant This year's MISS MARY HAR- This years pageant is now past

DIN-BAYLOR PAGEANT really did tense, but all good things must some strange things to all of the come to an end. Don't· you believe contestants. Not only was Jennifer it! There is always next year. ~Vhen Jordan vastly stricken but so"were the contestants and campus fmally many others. ' recover from this y~ar's pageant,

Take for instance Linda Moore, next year's pageant w11l be well un­commonly known as Edith Ann der way. the "child prodigy?" She displayed GOOD LUCK in July, Sharon, some very well written poetry, but and if you cannot find some un­was the cooty experience taken even bars in Fort Worth, remem­from real life? If s.o, are you in- ber that back here at MH-B you fected? were our Raisin Champ. Just sit

Sandy Wheeless took the audi- down on the stage and eat raisins, ence by storm, when she sang out after all you are a winner! that she was a woman. What we are now wondering is how she in· The Washington Monument is tends to prove that she can do any- 555 feet high. thing. -----,.---

.Jennifer Jordan, what can be ssid, except that to take a picture like the above, one would need "Sweet Inspiration." ·

Consider this a warning, but if you pass Terri Fyke on your way 'to class and she still appears to be Fiddling on the Roof and humming "If I Were a Rich Man," don't ask why she just hums it and pretend not to notice.

The students and faculty will no longer have to stand and watch Sharon Pavoggi go to the little girls room after the finals of the Raisin Championship. What will MH-B do without a Champion like Sharon? Probably do without one.

Many of the crew members were also stricken. Take for instance the strange plague that went around the prop crew. They had green feet and green fingernails from all that painting. Also Terri Moore and Vicki Cates go around brain washed humming "Bond Street." After two months you would think they would be tired of it. Nancy Ir· vin is Atill speechless about the tl·oublc she had with a thing called M-I·K·E. Talk up, Nancy!

was not n position that should ro· scmed prctt~ well entrenched in It has been called the most quire Senate confirmation. their respective cheeks, and then coveted award given in any beau·

As It turned out, the encounter the Justice Department contributed ty pageant. There is no scholar­was 11 scene straight out of student its two-cents worth and nearly top· ship, no larger pageant to com· government dn)'S, conducted in un- pod the whole show. pete ln. Thoro Ia only a plaque. ce1·tainty and chaired by confusion. Their jud(lcment is that tho leglsla· lt is not the plaque, but what is

But first a little background. tlon Is unconstitutional, because it behind the plaque that moons so Ash, whose present position often would retroactively require confh·· much. Because tho plaque Is fliV· has been termed second only to matlon of Ash, requiring him to be on to Miss Congeniality. This Ia that of tho Pa·esldent in Its power, removed from office and then reap· an honor voted on by the con· is a former chief executive of I .. !~- pointed. Apparently, the slgnlfl· tostonta In tho pageant. No one ton Industries, which Pl'cscntly has cnnce of that jug11llng lies In the clae, not oven the director, In· more thnn n half billion dollara In constitutional provision that the fluencos tho vote in any way. And disputed clnlm11 pondlng against only wny Congress can remove no one knows until tho proaonta· the Nnvy. Several wooks ugo (In o Executive Branch offlclal!i Is by tlon Is made who Miss Conaonlol· column entitled "Exit Frco Enter· lmpoocltmont. ity is. Thll year tho coveted a­prise • Enter Socialism") I noted Hop. Jock Brooks sold he views ward wont to Stephanie Barrett, that Ash had made no bonos about the constitutional question with Mlu Baptist Student Union. Intention to have n strong soy In slceptlclsm, but went on to win nll Stephnnio Ia o 19·Yoor ·old Navy hudaot maUcl'R, nn Intention awards by confoaslng that, just In freshman from Corpua Chrlatl. which one Navy official atronRlY coso, he hnd drafted nn amendment She is o Sociology major and af· criticized in Sonato hoorlnas as that would ubollsh tho Offlco of tor nraduatlon ahe plana to do bolng n blatant example of con· Management and Jludaet and then soclul work or church wot•k, She filet of lntoroat, 1·ccronto It, n manuovor that woul!l onjoya aporta and Ia a mombor

Last but not least is Carolyn Tlce. What can be said about the dh•ector? She Is a beauty, 11 charm· or and a tyrant.

Ter••• G1ntt, prellmlnerv tel· ent winner, performs for the ludgea,

SGA ELECTION . RUNOFFS MARCH 19 & 20

MH·B BOOKSTORE

VICE PRESWENT:

Donna Drew Cheryl Moore

TREASURER:

Sherry Balenger Cindy Irvin

If vou wont to have a voice­Vote fo.r the candidate of your choice!

Ash denied the conflict of Inter· roqulro tho reappointment of Ash of tho MH·r :On~• totm. Stet b~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ cat ohlll'QO, and tho Navy otflclnl In nny event, not to mo~tlon o~or~ r::n~:~~~~~~:~~v~f t:IOO p:a:nca:to Sa~ Will promptly cannod. Me11nwhllo, otht~r OMR cmployoo rom c or d

1 ht

entorprlslna reporter• dUll up incl· typist to j11nltor, ur PY n II • dentH of allo11crl huslnou irroaulnt'· On tho whole, it Will quito a p;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiiii_.._.._.._..i:iiiii:iiii-. ltto11 Involving Aah which nre 11tlll ahow and clollrly a good tlmo wn11 I cecl pondlna In n fadernl court ault. hnd by all. Monnwhllo, hack In tho ALL MATIIIUALI to bt P I

All or thoHo huppenlnaa, coupled ronl world, the OMB pu•hod ahead In THI IILLII mutt bt ''l!l:;' Publlthed weekly at Mary Hard"ln·Baylor College II I part of with tho Prosldont'• 11trong 11tnnoo with It• ronl ml11ion: ondlng focln- ~~~:~y \!1:,. ~~.: ;:v,., th~ the 1tudent activity, Return ~atage quaranteed, nd

1 on hi• right to Impound oongro•· rnl grnnta to olomont11ry and IIO· article 11 te IPP..IIr In, ""'" Entered at ttie Po1t Office In Bilton, Texac, 11 HCO -c Ill Rlonally npproprlntod tunclM condary 11ohool llbrarloa, cutting out. The artlcltt mutt bt matter under the Act of March 3, 187:1,

11 throuah tho budllet offloo, prompt· modlonl bonoflt• to tho elderly, and 'YP!Icl ancl cheulcl be maiiH Editor -··--··-·--·---·--·---··-.. - Su11n ICe tr od tho Sonnto to pnaa loal•lntlon eight •lnglc·Rpncod, •mnll·prlnt to 11. o. ••• 111, Alllltant Edltorc Sheila Rlchcrdcon, Vonle Hopklna that wouhl roqulro Aah'a oonflrmn· paao• .. of othor progrllm• to holp Bualnlll Manager -· __ Janice Andrew• tlon, on tho ground• that ho I• pooplo. ._ __________ _.

March 19, 1973 THE BELLS Page 3

Contestants (left to right) Lyn Thompson, Linda Glass, Susan K~ller, Teresa Gantt, Betty Reddell, and Deloris Chupic dance to "Bond Street" for the pageant audience.

Mary Ann Krupicka

Prelim W·inners Amid excitement and anticipa­

tion the preliminary night winners were announced. Each year an a­ward is given to the preliminary

M.ISS Ernst Mer•ltS. swimsuit and talent winners. These girls are chosen from the non-finalists, one for her excep-"The Grammy Awards" Lilerary Acclaim tional talent and one for her out-

·By SHEILA RICHARDSON Charley Pride, and in the Female . standing appearance in a swim-The 156th annual Grammy category Donna Fargo for "Happi· "A man's worst critic is him- suit.

Awards Show was presented live est Girl in the Whole USA." Char- self." This was Bonnie Ernst's This year's preliminary talent :from the Tennessee Theatre in ley Pride is truly a deserving soul impression when she received a winner was Teresa Gantt, Miss Nashville, Saturday, March 3, and - - I have no comments about Don- telephone call telling her that Recreational Association. Teresa was highlighted by performances na Fargo at the risk of being ugly she'd won second place in a is an 18-year-old freshman from of the nominated songs by their and offending those who happen to literature contest sponsored by Austin. She is majoring in Be­original performers. Andy Williams like the song. the Temple Federation of Wo- havioral Science and plans to do hosted the Awards, and the Mike The Best Pop Performance by a men's Clubs. 'Actually, it was a social work after graduation. For Curb Congregation guested and did Male Artist went to Harry Nilson last-minute impulse to enter the her talent in the Pageant, Teresa a medley of all 20-odd nominated fer "Without You." Other perfor· contest," Bonnie commented. "I did a series of floor exercises. songs. mers nominated in this area were really had no expectations for the She is a· member of the bowling

· Performers at the event were Gilbert O'Sullivan, Don McLean, poem to receive an award." The and gymnastics clubs on campus Gilbert O'Sullivan• Don McLean, Mac Davis, and Sammy Davis• Jr. winners of the 1973 Louzelle Rose and she says she used to raise Lo~gins and Messina, Curtis May- Best Pop Female Performance Barclay Contest were announced frogs in . a water meter for a

Teresa Gantt

Announced Ann did a twirling routine to the song - "Georgie Girl." For her talent she wore a costume which she designed and sewed herself.

Congratulations to both of these girls on a job well done.

Summer Internships Reprel?entative Jack Brooks, 9th

District, Texas, is offering sum­mer internships in Washington to three qualified young people from his District. The nominee should be at least 18 years of age and at leest a junior in an accredited institution of higher learning, and a. legal resident of his District. Interested students should contact Dr. McConnell.

field, Helen Reddy, Donna Fargo, was to Helen Reddy for "I Am Wo- March 13 at a luncheon of the hobby. Charley Pride, Mac Davis and the man." Other performers nominated Temple Federation of Women's The preliminary swimsuit win-Staple Singers. · were early Simon, Aretha Frank- Clubs. ner of the 1973 Miss MH·B Pa-

The record industry's ,top award lin, ~oberta ~lac~ and Barbara In November of 1972, another geant was Mary Ann Krupicka. for Record of the Year went to Ro- Stre1sand. A highlight of the even- f Mis Ernst's poems entitled Mary Ann is a 21-year-old senior 1

berta Flack for "The First Time ing was Miss Reddy's acceptance ~Remer!bering" received the rec- from Academy. She is a Home Ever I Saw Yom .Face," a song speech: " . ,: . And, finally, I'd l~e ogniUCJt . of ~tbird place ln the Economics major and plans to written by . Ewai1 McColl (who was to thank God. She makes every- T x s State Poetry Society Con- do extension work or teach after also awarded a Grammy in another thing possible!" The audience t: t In January of 1973 her graduation. She is listed in Who's big category for Song of the Year.) loved it. p:e~ "Summer Miles" was 'print- Who in America Col~eges and was

-The Record of the Year award goes My only real gripe about any of ed in the Bell County Monthly second runner-up m the 1972

\,~

"Anybody who thinks il'• hard to move mountain• never rend Geography exam• inatlon papen."

to both artist and producer. Other the winners was that some of the magazine. In her sophomore year Miss MH-~ Pageant. For her tal-nominees in this categ~ry wc~e really good ones didn't get any- at MH-D, one of her poems won :e:nt:.._:i:::n~t:.:.h:.:.ls::........:y:_e:_a_r_s _:_p_ag:.e-'~'-n_t_M_a_ry_:_ _____________ _ "Alone Again (Naturally) - - Gll· thing. Case in point - - "Alone an award with the Palmer Pub­bert O'Sullivan, "American Pic" - : Agaln (Naturally)." "American Pic" Ushing Company. Don McLean, "Song Sung Blue" - • wns among last year's winners, but Nell Diamond, "Without You" - · since it came out at the end of last Nillson, and "The Summer Knows" yea1• it received some nominations - - 1\ilchcl Legrand. Competition in thi!l time around too. Don McLean this category is always stiff, nnd tmd a bnd case of nerves while this year was certainly no cxcep- singing "Vincent," another solec· tlon. tlon off the "American Pic" album

Album of the Year went to "The that made good also. I suppose In Concert for Bangladesh," a con· front of a few million people watch· co1't originally put together ns a ing on either TV or in person, I giant benefit for tho people of that would be a little scared myself. I'm counll·y. Performers on tho 3-rcc· not sure, but I think he got tho ord packngo Included George liar- words a little messed up - • i£ he rison, Ringo Stnrr, J.oon Russell, did, ho covered well.

Miss Ernst is a senior Sociology and Home Economics major from San Antonio. She is currently class president, president of ,His­torical Philo Society, co-editor of tho Baylorian, a member of Sig­mn Tau Delta and Alpha Chi fraternities and tho Poetry Soc­iety,

'Discover Wildlife' Week Mar. lB-24 Eric Clopton, Klaus Voorman• and Tho really outstanding winner,

Barflngor, an Applo band who did taking all categories together, was the backups. A rather amusing In my opinion, "Bangladesh." Tho Plans nrc being readied by sight was Ringo poooptlng 1~ Grllm· best thing about It was probably thousands of local and state mys for tho various others in tho tho great job of producing a live groups across tho country for concert and carting thorn off on a concert and capturing tho llvo as. partlclpatlon In tho 36th annual tray. Othel' nominees In this onto· peats while preserving tho best National Wildlife Week, set for gory wore "American Pic," .•Jesus Best Country Malo Vocal wont to March 10.2il. Chrlat Superstar" • • Original stereo effects I've ever heard on The theme of tho 1973 Wild· Broadway Cast, "Moods" • • Nol.~ nny live album. Tho selection of lifo Week, sponsored each year Diamond, and "Nilson Schmllsson songs and arrallllcmcnt.s wns fan· by tho three and one-half mllllon • • Harry Nilson, tastlc, too • • J'vo ncvor thought member National Wildlife Fodera·

Tho Boat New Group award went much of sitar music but Ravl Shan· tlon and Ita state affiliates, Is to America, who popularlzod lear roa11y brings It to life on side "Discovor Wildlife - It's too "Horse With No Name,' "V~ntur,a one of tho sot. Loon Rusacll's mcd· Good to Mlaa." Focus of the week Hh&hway," and their l'ocont Don t Joy of "Jumpln' ,Jack Flash/Younll· will be on tho simple, yet ex· Cross tho River." OthorR nominated blood was also very good. cltlnll, joys that can bo found by llcro wore · Harry Chnplln, EngleR, 0 Americans of all ages In the out-Logglns and MoRBina, 11nd John door, n11tural world. Prlno. compotltlon was 11 llttlo Driving with one 11rm 11round The oxccutlvo vice prcaldont of

~· I

~ ·I '' tough horo t.oo, but It 11ppcnr11 as tho girl friend Ia sure to ond In a tho NWF, Thomas L. Kimball, though tho votcr11 (fol' once!) mndc church ceremony - either a wed· commented on the Wildlife Week's 'hrrl Pyko, flnt runner·up, alnga In talent competition. n good cholco. ·ding or 11 funorul. poster symbol, a young wood duck ;;;:;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;.;..;:;;;:;;;-:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiii

shown juat omcrglnll from Its RIIIARCH MATIRIALI stilt •s••W MIN 'otopsnJ nost. "All tb11t nowly·hntcbcrl

A L L T 0 p 1 C I duck has to do to broak out Into Bond for your dcaorlptlvo, up. 161 ••1 tho natural world I• take that to-date, 128-pago, mall order W H tlr•t atop out of tho no•t," Kim· catalog of s,soo quality ro- 11111Nn.L1IOIIIIO )110M 1 0 ball said. "And lL'a nearly na caa)' aearob papon. lncloM 1.00 to 104 tdOIII\1 for pooplo to tako thnt 1ame atop, cover po1t111 and handling, ptiiDJP.P•·IIII podw141 pues to break out Into nnturo and &oo

- ewo4 41 IWIUJtd JO nnf what beauty It ha• to offor." RIIIARCH UNLIMI!ID _ IWJI~ JOf IIIW DUJIIIJP During tbll year'• Wlldllfo

11t Glenrock Ava., lulto 101 •pt 11q111od Al)jiiM OO'OOl$ Weok, Kimball urges that tamlllo1 LOI ANOIL.II, CAL.IP. t0014 11got out and onjoy our wlld ro·

(111) 477·1474 • 477·14tl I a I .L N y M tl, I H IOUrCOI, Tho experlonco oan opon '-·"·W•o•n•e•o•d•a-loo-at.•.a.to.•.m.an.'.' ._, ._ __________ _. up an ontlrolv now world,"

Compliments of

BRITT DRUG CO. 112 ··E. Central - Phone 939-2682

:.. .. :p • .t.:.~;;:t • .t·~Jii~:C.it.L~'"a~l-....., ..... ---~--~------------------------------------

Page 4 THE BELLS March 19, 1973

Student Jobs in Europe Offset Dollar Devaluation

For any student planning a in advance and provided free of trip to Europe a temporary pay- charge with most jobs. The Stu­ing job in Austria, Switzerland, dent Overseas Services (SOS), a France or some other country Luxembourg student organization could be the answer. to lower pur- which has been helping students chasing power of the U. S. dollar. for the past 15 years, will obtain Recently raised wages in Europe a job, work permit, visa, and any will not only offset any loss in other necessary working papers dollar value, but a few weeks required for any college student work at a resort, hotel or res- who applies early enough. SOS taurant job providing wages plus also provides a job orientation in free room and board will actually Europe before going to your job. pay for the youth fare air ticket Application forms, job listings and provide leftover cash for and descriptionss, and the SOS traveling around Europe. Tern- Handbook on earning a trip to porary paying student jobs arc Europe may be obtained by send­available to any student willing ing your name, address, educa­to work in order to see Europe. tiona} institution, and $1 (for ad-

Most jobs are in Austria, S\vit- dressing, handling, printing, and zerland, France and Germany in postage) to Placement Office, such categories as resort, hotel, SOS, Box 5173, Santa Barbara, restaurant, hospital and farm Calif. 93107. Inquiries and appli­work. Jobs arc also available in cations for paying jobs in Europe factories, offices and shops. should be sent early enough to Standard wages are always paid, allow SOS ample time to process and room and board are arranged . the papers. ·

Texas Twin 200 Has 2 New Entries

MH-B Stops TLC The Mary Hardin-Baylor basket­

ball team beat Texas Lutheran College Station - AI Unser in a horne game last Tuesday.

and Ramo. Stott are two of the When the girls got out on the latest ent~u:s. received in the two floor they showed they meant USAC ~lVISlons schedu!ed to business and beat Texas Lutheran compete m the Texas Twm 200's 56-46. at Texas World Speedway. From the minute the ball was

AI Unser has entered his new- tapped we were ahead and stayed ~Y designed Of~y-po~ered ~arnelli ahead all through the game. Texas I? th~ . ~amp10nsbip .(ln~1anapo- Lutheran put up a good fight and hs) dlVlSlOn of the twm-bill clas- tried hard but our girls were sic. set _for Saturd.ay, April 7th strong, fast and just outdid them. which will be t~e ftrst of the two Once we had the ball TLC had a separate ~00-mile races around hard time controlling us until it the two-mile oval. was too late - We scored.

The former National Driving Last weekend the team traveled titleholder is one of only four to San Antonio to play Trinity men to score two consecutive vic- for the District Tournament. Th~ tories in the prestigious Indiana- results of the tournament have polis 500. He has finished in the not yet been announced. top two positions on four occas- The seven members of the team sions in his last five starts at have put in many long hours of Indianapolis. practice but a lot of credit goes

Pageant director, Carolyn Tlce, congratulates the new Miss Miry Hardin-Baylor, Sharon Pav0111. Ramo Stott, driving a Dodge, to the coach, Mrs. Sue Hix who heads a strong list of entries in has done a marvelous job. The the stock car category for the team consist of one junior, Deb- ----------------......;...-----------------------

Open Meeting to Be Held second of the 2()().rnilc races. bie (Smirk) Sims; two sophomores, The former two-time Auto- Donna Stapp and Rarna Tate; and

mobile Racing Club of America four freshmen, Dicque Lucenay, champion who joined USAC in Jenelle Stewart, Deborah Shiley Comments and suggestions will 1972 is a past winner of the rich and Mickie Rose. The manager is be sought in a public meeting Daytona ARCA 300 at the Day- Cindy (Connetlcut) Latham, and in Waco March 21 on a study to tona International Speedway. scorer is Sherry Emery. devise a plan for management of

Stott increased his career total If the girls win the District the quality of surface water in of super speedway victories to Tournament they will go to the the 45,000 square miles of the three last year when he won the State Tournament. The date and Brazos River basin and adjoining stock car counterpart of the place for this event is unknown, Coastal areas. Michigan Twin 200's by only a o The meeting, sponsored by the few feet. A third super speedway MH-B Golfers Brazos River, Authority, will be win came at tho Alabama Inter· L M held In Waco s Convention Center national Motor Speedway in Tal- OSe to CC at 10() Washington Avenue at 2 lad ega In' a 300-mllc ARCA race. The Mury Hardin-Baylor Col· p.m. He also has a second place finish lege golfers were edged out by Purpose of tho meeting, Col. to his credit at Alabama track, the McLennan County College Walter Wells, General Manager flnhiblng second to James Hylton team. Tho MH·B five-man team of the Authority, said, ls to do· in the Talladega 500 NASCAR recorded a 311, just three shots scribe tho prollmlnnry plans for event. back of the MCC boys who had tho study, to answer questions

Unser and Stott arc considered a 308, concerning tho study nnd tho fl· two of tho top entries In thch• For tho MH-B team Butch nal plan and to offer an oppor· respective divisions for tho Texas Price was medalist with a 73 tunlty for public comment and Twin 200's. closely followed by Glenn Simp: questions,

---01--- son with n 78. Bill Guess and 'J'he area to be studied includes Three hll'llR which cannot fly nrc Mike Schuetze had trouble on tho all of tho watershed of tho Brazos

u_;;,o;;;;;;o;;m;;u,;;;, ;;Jc;;l;;w;;l ;;a;;n;;tl;;o;;s;,;;;b;,;;;•i;,;;;cl;,;;;l.;;;;;;;;;;;~ back nino to finish at ao, and River and the coastal arena be· r Jim Thomas was flustered with tween tho Colorado River Basin

Dates of Interest March 24 - Duplex Products,

Temple Cleave Hardy at 0:11S a.m., will return by noon)

March 27 - Royal Aendomln Open llouso (TompJo Boys Choir)

Mm·ch 31 - RA Spring Play Day

April 7 - Nntlonal Tonohora Examinations

April 14-21 - Sprlnll Uo11dnys Ap1•il 20 - Gradunto Records

Exnmlnntlons Cronllvo Writing Work11hop (0 n,m. to 4 11,m,)

May IS - Trip to Waco -nrownlnll I~lbrnry and Ft. FIKchor ,loavo UuJ•dy at 0:30 a.m.) If lntcroatocl In any of tho

nbovo trip•, lnquh·o In tho Of· fico of tho Donn of Studonta.

an 815, on tho west and tho watersheds ---o of Chocolate Bayou,, Mustang Bn·

Standing throe Inches tall and you, Clear Crook, and the San weighing less than an ounce, tho Jacinto Rivor on tho oast. vamph·o bat lR one of tho most Tho Governor's Office, more deadly posts In Latin Amot•ica. than n year ago, designated tho A carrier of rnblos, it infocts Brazos River Authority as tho cattle with tho dlsonso while it state nlloncy to carry out tho laps. tho blood from tiny puncture study nnd develop tho program to wounda it inflicts on them. In lnsuro that tho qunllty of surface ono year, thla ct•caturo wns hold wntora in tho atudy nron moots responsible for killing ovor n mll· tho nooda ot tho pooplo of tho Jlon head of cattle, costlnll $250 76 countloa involved In tho aron. million in milk and moat Joaaoa Tho Authority aasomblecl the tho March SCIENCE DIGEST ro! nucleus of n atatr to 1tart pro· ports. Using a jclly-lllco anti-eo· llmlnary studio• to dotormlno n11ulunt on tho bats which they which direction tho n\lthorlzod imrost and dlo from while ~:room- study ahould tnko. inll thomaolvo11, scientists llavo "Wo aro juat now at tho point boon nbJo to curtail tho growth of 1tartlng tho study," Col. Wolll ot tho vumplro without complotoly liPid, "and mootln"s such na thl• dostroylnu tho spocloa, nro nocouary both now and nt

---o tho end nf rnujoJ• atudy pha&ca to aaauro that tho plan Ia roaponalvo

Thtt ponulthnnto day of tho to tho nood1 of tho pooplo •-----------...1 month Ia tho noxt to tho la1t duy, throughout tho plnnnlng nl'oa,"

The plan Is being made to ward oU man-made pollution problems which may originate during high growth periods predicted for the Brazos basin and adjoining coast· al areas ·in future years.

Most pollution of the Brazos has in the past como from nn· tural salt springs and seepages in the upper portion of tho river watershed. Tho Corps of Engi· nccrs, through studies carried out in cooperation with tho Brazos River Authority, Texas Water Do· volopmont Board and Federal En· vlronmontal Protection Agency, has developed 11 plan for control· ling this natural salt pollution.

Col, Wells emphasized that tho study will bo curried out in close coordination with tho Texas Wa· tor Quality Board and tho Gov· ornor's Division of Planning, and with tho advice and co\msol of a Plnnninll Advlaory Committee conslstlnll of reprosontatlvos from federal, state and rc~tlonal JlOV· ornmontnl units f1•om tho 76 coun· ty study aroa. This committee wl11 provlclo ovornll policy direc­tion in tho planning and help nssuro thnt tho study roflootR views of govornmontnl units and tho lloncral public,

---01---Monrovla, J.lhoJ•In Ia named for

u. S. President Jnmo11 Monroe,

Dr. Kissinger's Visit to Asia ·

(Continued from Last Week) The two sides exchanged views

on the manner in which the United Stacs will contribute to healing the wounds of war and to post-war economic reconstruction in North Vietnam. They agreed to establish a DRVN-U.S. Joint Economic Commission. This Commission, which will bo composed of an eq. ual number of representatives from each side, will be charged with tho task of developing the economic relations between the Dcrnocrntlc Republic of Vietnam and tho United Slates.

The two sldea also cxchan&~ed views on the convening of ln· tcrnatlonal Conference on VIet­nam, aa pt•ovided for In Article 19 of tho Pnrls Agrooment on VIet­nam, They will continuo thoh• con· sullations with tho othor partlcl· pants In tho conforonco so ns to Pl'opnro tho ground fot• n success­ful meeting,

'l1lo two Rides considered the poHl·Wil\' rolntlonshlp between tho Democratic llopuhllo of VIetnam nnd tho United Stntos, and exam· lnod concreto stops which can be tnlccn to not•mnllzo the rolntlona botwoon tho two countrloll.. They agreed on cortnln general prlnol· plc11 which ahouJd govern tholr mu· tual relation•:

-All provision• of tho Pnrl1 Agreement on Vlotnnm nnd Ita protocoJa ahotild ho tully nnd 1cru· pulnualy lmplomontod.

-Tho Dcmocratlo Republic of VIetnam nnd tho United Stntoa ahould 11trlvo for 11 now rolntlon· ship hn•od on ro1poot tor onah other'• lndopondonco and 1ovorol· ~:nty, nun-lntorforonco In oaoh other'• Internal affnlr•, equality aml mutual bonoflt.

(Continued Noxt Wook)

FIFTY-SIXTH ..:Y.:EA:.:::R:....... _________ ..:,MA:.:.::R::;Y:_:H::.A.::.RD=IN:.:-B.=:.;A:.:Y.:.LO::.R:.:....:C:;:O:;:L=LEG=.:E::.,..:B:;:E::LT:.:O:.:N..:;,:....:.;TEXA::.;:..:;S;.;.,..:MA,;.;,;..,~RC.;;.;H..;;,...:2:.:6:.:.,·..:l:..:9.:,;7::.3_· ·:...· -~----------·~N.:.:o:.:·....;2:;;1

Annual Easter Pageant Dated fot. Aptjl· ·13th . . ·'·. "'"": ..

April 13 marks the date for the 34th MH-B all-college production of Christ's last days on earth. The ·story is portrayed in thirteen scenes, beginning with Christ's triumphal entry into Jerusalem; the Cleansing of the Temple; the Conspiracy of the Priests and Phar­isees; Simon's Feast; the Bargain­ing of Judas; Pi\3te's Trial; the Crucifixion; the Resurrection; and the Last Appearal)ce of Jesus. Lu­ther Memorial provide's the very picturesque setting for the scenes.

. are costu~~d as au~Jie"'ntWWlY as'':jiy ·Do~ Byerly o~ Beaumont and possible. ·,M~ny of the' ·cast'<will Judast'Will be portrayed 15y Debbie have their hair dyed qr __ grayed, .... Craig of Altus, Oklahoma. .

The Easter Pageant is an all-stu­dent production. This means, first of all, that all director positions

Luther Memorl•l will be tho ilte of tho Annu•l E•ster P•to•nt which Is to be presented on April 13.

are held by students. Mike Bei- Dysart has been selected to play mer, a senior nursing major from Christ. Mr. Hoppock is a major Temple, is the director. Bonnie in Speech and Drama from Tern­Ernst, senior sociology and home pie, and Miss Dysart is a major economics major from San Anton- in Nursing from Temple. Danette io, and Helen Wilson, sophomore Lowery, senior secondary educa­sociology major from Killeen, will -tion major from Killeen, will nar-serve as assistant directors. ·rate.

Doug Hoppock has been chosen Being an all-student production to be the voice of Christ, and Ann can carry an even greater mean-

i .

. Nonn Keller Met hew

Ann lpoer Jemot

Deltltlo Cr•lt ,lud••

Jo Ann W•tnn , ThH.UI

Iennie lrnat John

ing. It can mean that all students are involved in some capacity with the pageant. All students - com­muters, dorm, married, single - are invited to participate. Faculty, ad­ministration, and all other mem­bers of the college family are in­vited to take part in the produc­tion.

All participants in the pageant

Donn• Byerly Phillip

Terry fiiVOIIII .... .,

and several will wear be·ards· in Parts. which are ,specified for order to achieve the age and ap- juniors iire · those 9t· the big~ pearance of the person whom Priests, Pharisees, H~rodians, and they portray. All those playing the Saducees. Th1:1re are many addition­disciples are presented as near as al roles enacted throughout the P!!SSible to· available description. thirteen scenes. Especially· impor­

.; .. Roles., ,which ·are sp~cified to tant are the roles of those in the seniors a~ great honor's to receive. crowd. These parts prove to ident­Portraying'\.Peter wiiJ, . be. Terry ify directly with the audience be­Pavoggi from .E. Paso; James will cause of the intense interaction be played by Ann Speer of Belton'; which is displayed within the Bonnie Ernst of San Antqnio will crowd. play John. - Jesus Christ . . . superstar - or

Selected to play Andrew was troublemaker?? Margot Rebovich of Belton; Pam hero - or fool?? Kien of Carthage will portray truth - or fiction?? Bartholomew; Kathy Tomlin of Truly this Man who lived some Brenham will play the part of 2,000 years ago has produced many Thomas. profound reactions. Some of the

Portraying James of Alpheus reactions of that day - those of will be Chris Walker of Harvey, John the disciple, Caiphas the La.; Norm Kelly of Belton will high Priest, and Simon of Cyrene play the part of Matthew; Jo Ann - were shared in chapel last Tues­Watson of Gatesville will portray day by those who are actually Thaddeus. playing these roles.

Simon, the Canaanite, will be It's not a dead "tradition", but played by Frances Terrell of ,a living vibrant .story. Come and Gatesville; Philiip will be played find your place in it.

EAST·ER PAGEANT - 1973 "'·~,,~., ..... , . ..:SGHEDU-LE,. .. FOR·~·EH:&ARSALS···~.-;.·tl• . . . . . .

(All rehoersels · •re It· Luther Memorlel)

March 26 (M) - 5:45-9:00 p.m. - Christ and disciples, temple crowd, crowd leaders, all other named parts.

27 (Tu) - 5:30-7:00 p.m. - Christ and disciples. 29 (Th) - 5:45-8:00 - Crowd leaders and crowd.

April 2 (M) - 5:45-???? - Everybody.

PLEASE - EVERYBODY COME I I I I I

Merlit· Robovlah Andrew

:: ~, "· ...

...... i: ·"i"'"

Page 2 THE BELLS March 26, 1973

Letter to Editor

'Sissy' is Guest Chapel Speaker

Human Guinea Pigs mans, Humphrey has proposed to establish a National Human Ex­perimentation Standards Board, an independent agency nuthorized to draw up . rigorous guidelines gov­erning human experimentation in projects financed by federal funds.

Dear Girls:

COMPLEXION HINT - ''There is no beautifier of com­plexion, or form, or behavior, like the wish to scatter joy and not pain around us."

BELTON - Officials at Mary Hardin-Baylor College extended an invitation to area residents to hear a talk by Frances "Sissy" Faren­thold Thursday, March 22, on the college campus in Walton Chapel. The board would have subpoena

power and the right to hold hear­ings; it could obtain injunctions to halt experiments not in com­pliance with its guidelines.

The above quote is by Ralph Waldo Emerson and describes why each of you girls are so beautiful.

It was with a joyous heart that I accepted the hard hat decorated by the pageant committee on behalf of the committee and the contestants of the Miss MH-B Scholarship Pageant. Your thoughtfulness and added work to secure and decorate a gift for me will always be remembered as a very special -

l\Irs. Farenthold discussed the women's equal rights amendment to the U. S. Constitution, accord­ing to her office in Austin.

KEEPSAKES

Oh, the joy of memories, The joy of recollections! The joy of keepsakes and souvenirs That so hold our affections.

And each year they grow more precious These keepsakes that we hold, And we wouldn't part with either For all their weight in gold.

There is another favorite quote "When skill and love work together, excepf a masterpiece." Your pageant was a master· piece; if I contributed in any small way - it was indeed my pleasure. Every member of the committee and every contestant is a joy to know and it was a pleasure to work for and with you.

FRANK J. BARNETT, JR. Superintendent B.F.W. Construction

Easter Pageant - For Everyone! The annual Easter Pageant is a project of the entire college.

It not only depicts a beautifying and. moving religious spectacle; it gives us an opportunity to interest many in our college.

Residents of area towns, as well as prospective students, and visitors from all parts of the state come to MH-B for the pageant.

For those who are cast or crew members, a rare and un­definable feeling is experienced. For those who occupy spectator seats, each are sensed with a filling, unlike any other.

Participating in the Easter Pageant in any way will not only be rewarding for the college and the audience, it will be reward· . ing for the individual if we all approach it with the right attitude.

Support your local Easter Pageant - it's the God's truth.

-------0-----

Letter to Editor Dear Editor, place that mind was situated. Ev-

Last week in Chapel it was in- erything made by God that has dicated to tho audience that those ever been viewed by the human students, faculty and administra- eye, has at one time or another tlon who helped In making the been made by the human mind to Miss Mary Hardin-Baylor Pageant appear vulgar and tasteless. what it was, had committed sin. These girls give daily to this Furthermore, it was stated that campus; their beauty, their grace, the 25 contestants were committ· their talent, and their Christian ing adultery with the male species witness. The pageant wa11 given to il) the audicnci!. spotlight 25 of tho finest girls on

Mrs. Farenthold canie to MH-B folowing her recent election as Chairperson of the National Wo­men's ·Political Caucus during that organization's national convention in Houston.

She is assistant professor of law at Texas Southern University and currently a member of the Texas Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, on which she has served since 1968.

In 1972, Mrs. Farenthold ran second in the political race for governor of Texas, accumulating 46 percent of the vote. She also became the first woman in history to have her name placed in nom­ination for vice president of the United States. She placed second during the 1972 ·Democratic Na­tional Convention, receiving more than 400 votes.

Mrs. Skaggs Takes Secretarial Post

Mrs. Norma Skaggs, Assistant Dean of Students, has been elec­ted Secretary of the Texas Baptist Student Personnel Association.

Mrs. Skaggs is a graduate of East Texas State University where she earned both her bachelor's and master's degrees. She has taught college English at East Tex­as State University and the Uni­versity of Tennessee. Mrs. Skaggs is' also a member of the Mid Texas Personnel and Guidance Associa­tion .

Eight Texas Baptist colleg~s are represented within the organiza­tion. Francis Curtis, Assistant' Dean of Life at Houston Baptist College, was elected President.

Delta Beta News

By Ron Hendren

WASHINGTON It wasn't much, they told the prisoner, just minor surgery on his brain resign­ed to make him less violent, and with the surgery came the pro­mise of freedom.

A scene out of 1984? No. The time is today and the location is the California Medical Facility at Vacaville, where operations like the one described above were re­cently performed on three prison-

Senator Edward M. Kennedy (D-1\:Iass.), chairman of the Subcom­mittee on Health, has already con­ducted hearings on human exper­imentation. Interest on the sub­ject is high in both the Senate and House, and prospects for Leg­islation along the lines proposed by Humphrey seem good.

Meanwhile the experiments go on, and the majority of physi­cians conducting them, says Hum­phrey, have never even studied the ethics of testing. Perhaps some of them have forgotten the ad­monition of Hippocrates: "Life is short, and the art long; the occa­sion instant, decision difficult, ex­periment perilous."

SGA Slate Filled ers. The top four offices of SGA

What the prisoners were not told for the 1973-74 school year were is . that the psychosurgery would finalized after a runoff election render them incapable of feeling pleasure or sadness, and would March 20. forever render decision making Helen Wilson of Killeen will fill difficult for them. the office of President. Helen, who

But the end goal was achieved has been on the Deans list every -permanently altering the sub- semester since her enrollment, will jects' behavior-and that seems to be a junior next fall. This scm­be enough to satisfy a growing ester she is serving as assistant number of the medical and gov- director for the Easter Pageant ernment authorities who support and is a class officer. psychosurgery. Serving as Vice President will

Psychosurgery is just · one of be Donna Drew of Copperas Cove. the many forms of experiments- She is an active member of Roy­tions which are being conducted al Academia Society and the Bap­on humans today, often without tist Student Union Executive Coon­their full understanding and some- ell. Donna, current" president of Al­times without their knowledge. pba Chi Fraternity, will be a sen·

Senator Hubert H. Humphrey ior. · · ., (D-Minn.) late last month intro- The new SGA secretary is Eve­duced legislation to set rigorous lyn Fry of Friendswood. She is guidelines governing medical ex- co-editor of the Bluebonnet and periments involving people. is sening on Student Life Com-

He reminded his c~lleagues of mittee. a barbaric syphillis study involving Cindy Irvin of Austin will occupy 430 black men which was conduct- the office of treasurer •. Cindy, as ed over a period of 40 years in Freshman class president, served Alabama. The men, all affiicted on SGA legislative this year. with syphillis, were given $50 plus All of the candidates gave cam­burial expenses not to undergo paign speeches in Chapel on Tues­treatment for their disease. At day, March 13. None of them pro· least 28 and perhaps as · many as mised anything except their best 107 died as a result. efforts. ·In the months to come,

~ Out of all these people who this campus, and give to them participated in the Pageant, I some of the reward they deserve firmly believe that all of them have for. making this campus what It

Tho Delta Beta Chapter of Sig­ma Tau Delta, national English honorary, initiated new members during a question and answer session and a candlelight ceremony on March 1. The new members include Danctte Lowery, Joy Rost, Ann Speer, Janet Aurentz, Rilla Eproson, Becky Carroll, Frances Atmar, Doris Hankamer, Jacque­line Jones, and Doris Prater.

Orrtcers selected for tho 1973· 1974 school term are Lynn Eu· banks - President; Rilla Eproson -Vice-President; Joy Rost - Sec­retary/Treasurer; and Janet Au· rentz - Historian/Reporter. Spon· sor of tho club is Dr. Iva Fussell. During a brief business mooting, plans wore discussed for awarding cash prizes to tho authors of art· lclcs selected for tho Baylorlan and for attending tho national convention of Sigma Tau Delta to ho held In Waco next year.

Humphrey said the fact that many people will be watching to those men volunteered is clear sec if those elected will make or indication that consent of those break that promise. Every offl· Involved Is a totally inadequate cor should work to tho best of standard. Tho most dangerous ex- her ability but the students .must porlments almost always find the remember that SGA is not compos· poor and uneducated as .their sub- ed of the officen alone. SGA is jects, people who may not be composed of the students. And in able to understand or fully com- ordel' foa• the students to have a prebend the danger to which they voice, they must speak up. Throu· will be exposed. ghout this year and next oycar,

a strong faith In God thru Christ. is. Several gave verbal witness of This incident has stirred the their relationship with Christ in campus to an un-Christliko attl· their comments to the audience. tude and has thus provided our

As far as committing adultery, campus with a tremendous stumb· this Is preposterous. That would ling block townrd true Christian hnvc to be In tho mind of tho witness. Most If not all tho young audience. Those mombors of tho ladles who participated arc pro· audience thnt I have had tho op- fesslng, dedicated, soul winning, portunlty to talk with, havo ad· sincere mature Christians and mired tho contostants for tho graco, should receive an apology from beauty, and tnlont they brought both tho speaker and his spo'n· forth. sora. Tho chat•aotor and Chrlstinn

In some cases, according to support your SGA officers. Thro· Humphroy, Individuals may . not ugh them, students can and will be even be aware thoy arc the sub· hona·d. jocts of a test. Recently, accord· '"iii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::, lng to associates of consumer ad· r vocate Ralph Nader, tho Unlver· RIIIARCH MATIRIALI slty of Michigan dispensed dlothY· A L L T 0 P I C I

--~o For a momber or the audience wltnMs of thoso oyoung ladles has h

to think of the girls DR adultero&· boon brought Into question with· Sop omore News , 11es would como cntla·oly from that out just reason. MATTHEW '7:1·11

stilbestrol CDES) to coeds who Send for your delcrlptlvo, up. feared they might be pregnant. to-dato, 128-page, mall order DES Is n synthetic csta·ogen which cataloll of 8,300 quality re­hna boon linked to cancer. Tho aearch paper•. lncloH 1,00 to daughters of some 840 women cover pott110 1nd hendllng,

persons stato of mind, and tho MarJZle Honnoscy SOPHS., It's only n few moro -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::; weeks until we're Juniors! Wo have • another JZront year ahead of uslll

Are you nostalgic about the outdoors? Do you enjoy tramping thru the woods?

Come to the

RA OVERNIGHT

April 6 & 7

Food and Fun Test Your skills against the wilds of nature!

Election of our clasH offlcors for the comlnl( ycnr will bo APRn. 15, 1973 at 11:00 a.m. In Pre~&or Auditorium. To run for Prcaldont, Vlco-Proslderl&. Secretary, or Tron· 1uror you must have and malntnln a grnde point nvorago of 2.110 overall nml/or for tho prooodlnll •omo•tcr.

If you wlah tn run tor nn oflloo, pick up 11 potltlon In tho Dean of AtmlontR Office, Thla petition muat

who woa•o given DES In tho early RIIIARCH UNLIMITID 10110'& m·o now found to oxpor· 519 Glenrock Avo., lulto 203 lenco 11 hlllh rate of malignancies, LOI ANOILII, CALifl, 90024 according to Humphrey. (213) 477·1474 • 477·1491

'l'o atom unwarranted and overly "Wo neod a local 1ato1man" dangerous oxpcrlmont• on hu· ._ ___________ _,

bo all(nod by tho Roalatrar, MrA. of Normand; and a minimum of 20 Publlahed weeklv at Merv Herdln·B•vlor College 11 1 part sophomore ailznnturo1, notut•n tho the atudent ectlvltv. Return poatege guerenteed, petition to tho Dean of student• Entered at tlie Poat Office In Belton, Texea, 11 ltcand-clall after It 111 completed. metter under the Act of March 3, 1873,

Show your nalnbok colora by Editor ----·----·-··-·--·-···-··--···-·--- Su11n Keller aottlnll Involved 1 I I I Thoro'• Anlatent Edltor1 Sheila Rlchardaon, Vonle Hopklnl a place tor VOUI I Bualnen Manager - --- Janlct Andrew•

March 26, 1973 THE BELLS

Odd Day Features Oddhalls For weeks everyone heard the to their name, the "Odds' went

murmurs. Hushed voices whisper- to supper dressed Odd and acting ed "Odd Day Is Coming." As the Odd. For desert they had a spec­day approached, the murmur grew ial ODD DAY cake decorated with into a roar. Not only did the soph- a rainbow and the two odd years, omores say it, but the fish picked '73 and '75. Like the song says, it up. But, when they said it, it "Oh we're sophomores and we're was slightly different. Instead of seniors and we may be odd thats the glorious admonition, "ODD true . . ." DAY IS COMING!", they said "odd Of course there are some high day is coming?" points of the day which cannot

MISS SHARON PAVOGGI, Miu Mary Hardin-Baylor College of 1973-74, dlscusMs trophies to be presented at the Belton Rotary Club "Search for Talent" .with Jack Stamps, left, Search chair­man, and Bill Stanford, right, Rotary president. The Search for Talent will be staged Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights, In the Belton High School Auditorium. Miss Pavoggi will be aulstant master of ceremonies for some of the performances. Curtain time is 7 p.m. (Photo by Dallas Tiner)

Fish all over campus began to be overlooked. Such as the roo­gather into small groups to talk ment Jenifer Jordan went face about it. Whenever some of them first into the cake "with just a saw a sophomore, they would little help from her friends." Or shiver and run. The _rumors grew the ensuing free-for-all the event worse day by day. Fantastically started. Some people had more horrible rumors began to spread cake on the outside than on the in­about last year, and the year be- side, didn't they J. A. And it's ru­fore, and the year before that, and mored that many of the fish were the year before that. Wait a min- blindfolded and taken to no one ute, there was no year before that. knows where, right Fish Irvin? After all, this is just a baby tra- Yes, ODD DAY was definitely dition. It just had its fourth birth- something to be remembered. And day. as it is celebrated in years to·

It's hard to dispel rumors once come, its meaning will become they get started. But we shall try clearer. But to help out some of to stop a few of them. For in- you DUM FISH right now, there stance, Fish Rose, was it really follows a definition of Odd Day. three times as bad as initiation? ODD DAY: March 17 of any

literary · Magazine Marks 60th Year in Existance

Eta-Omicron Represented For Sixth Year

And Fish Moore, was it worth given year. The day the Rain-your time to get up at 4:00 a.m. bow elass received the symbol, so you'd be ready for the sopho- a day on which all those who mores to "surPrise" you? Fish graduate in an odd year can Pavoggi, what kind of horrible stand up and be counted. (Be-thoughts did you think when you cause the traditional Odd Day opened the door on a roomful of fell on Saturday this year, Odd sophomores? Of course we'll never Day was celebrated on the 15th

By JAN WARD Kennedy" (1964); and the 1922 de- Gene Pruitt, a Mary Hardin- really know what one fish thought in order for everyone to be 1972 marked the sixtieth anni- bate question. with affirmative and Baylor College history student,

versary for Mary Hardin-Baylor's negative replies, "Resolved: That will present an undergraduate pa­literary magazine, The Baylorian. All Immigration Should Be Pro- per at the Southwest Regional 'The first issue, printed in October, hibited From the United States Convention of Phi Alpha Theta 1912, contained the following ex- for a Period of Two Years" have honor society in history at Bay-

when she kept finding notes on able to participate.)

cerpt from its editorial: appeared in past Baylorians. In the lor University March 25. "Today the Baylorian sets out Baylorian's span of sixty years Titled "The Party of Jackson on her maiden journey, weak, there have also been literary cri- Becomes the Party of Roosevelt: insufficient and lacking in ex- ticisms, humorous and protest ar- Abrogation of the Two-Thirds perience ... Though her crew ticles, one-act dramas, character Rule, 1936," the paper concerns be courageous and determined, sketches, and delightful short stor- party procedures of the National she may flounder · and sink, ies. Aspiring MH-B poets have com- Democratic Convention. In repeal-

. but as surely as Baylor people posed halkus, sonnets, couplets, ing the century-old rule requiring never give ·up until success frea and blank verse with supris- party nominees to.· receive two­is theirs . . • so surely there ing dexterity and imagination. thi.i-ds of the delegate vote, the will one day be a Baylorian, The Baylorian's first dedicated party denied the Southern states rich in our experience, and issue came in 1914, and this tra- their virtual veto over candidates sure in its own merits that dition has been followed spor- unacceptable to the region. shall bring rich retur~s of adically. Also, in the December, Pruitt is. a senior history major satisfaction and joy to those 1914, issue there appeared the fir~t from Ha~ulton. He is president who sent her out." · original artwork for the cover. of MH-B s local chapter of Phi

The Baylorian Issues have rna- More dependence on art contribu- Alpha Theta and was the winner tured and mellowed as the years tions came in the 1930's. Today art of the undergraduate best-pap.er have gone by. The first issues of contributions play a vital role in award at the E. C. Barksdale Lee­the magazine mainly contained the publication of tho Baylorian. tures at the University of Texas campus news, Historical Phil a and Mary liard in - Baylor students at lz Arli

1 ngiton a year ago. bHis

h t b t 1 t d tl t pr e-w nn ng paper was su se-Royal Academia notes, jokes, and ave proven o e a en e ar s s, tl bli h d even a graduating class, complete often times becoming professional qu;~i Y Af~a s T~eia Is an inter· with pictures and prophecies, Pub- writers and artists after gradua- national :onor society In history. llcatlon interrupted by World War tlon, Tho Baylorian is growing and With over 400 chapters in the 1, tho literary magazine returned ~aturing to reflect tho college u. s. and six foreign countries, in 1921 and has been purely lit· students who contribute so creat- It is largest in number of chap.. crary since then. lvoly to it. ters of those societies accredited

College students nrc notorious- o by the Association of College ly involved In world affairs. Mary One horsepower 111 the power Honor Societies. Hardin-Baylor students arc no ex- required to lift 33,000 pounds one Tho organization Is comprised coptlon. Such articles and poems foot in one minute. of students and professors elec-as "Tho Mexican Question" (1913); ted on the basis of excellence in .. Tho World, tho War, and Me" the study and writing of history. (1942); "Atomic Energy" (1944); Noah Webster beaan writing the Its aim Is to promote the study .. Our Black Brothers" (19158·39): cllctlonnry In 1807 and finished in of history through publication, .. In Memoriam: John Fitzgerald 1828. good teaching and the exchange

of Ideas among historians • .-o:::::::::::::::=:::::::;;;:::;;;:::;;;:::;;;:::;;;::=-.::;;;:::;;;:::;;;;:;;;:::;;;:::;;;::-=:;;;;:;-. Chapters from Texas Christian

COLLEGE STU DENT'S POETRY ANTHOLOGY

The NATIONAL POETRY PRESS

announces Its

SPRING COMPETITION The closing date for the submission of manuscripts by

College Students Ia

Apr II 1 0 ANY STUDENT attending either lunlor or senior college Is eligi­ble to submit his verae, There Is no limitation ea to form or theme. Shorter work• ere preferred by the Board of Judges, beceuae of apace llmltetlona.

Each poem must l:;e TYPED or PRINTED on e separate aheet, and muat bear the NAME end HOME ADDRESS of the student, end the COLLEGE ADDRESS Dl well.

University, Southern Methodist Unlvorslty, St. Mary's University, Texas A&M University, North Texas State Unlvl)rslty and tho Unlveralty of Houiton are expec­ted to aend delegations to tho convention. Baylor, a recent roclp· lent of a Phl Alpha Theta char­tor, Ia host of lta· first regional mooting, Mary Hardin-Baylor host­ed a roglonal mooting In 1960,

Pruitt'• paper will mark tho Rlxth consocutlvo y o a r that Mli·B'a Eta-Omicron chapter has appeared on tho roulonal pro­gram,

About a dozen mombor11 of tho local chapter, along with fnculty advllor Wllllam Harlow and hll• tory department mombora Al Jlor· voy and Stewart Smith, arc ox­pootod to attend tho moot1n11. ---o---

the board saying "Only -- In answer to one fishes inquiries, more days 'til ODD DAY" will we Cathy Smith? And some of the fish will never tell the thoughts that ran thru their minds when all the sophomores came to supper dressed in their rainbow shirts.

"Don't feel so sad, It is not over.

For you'll be fish To us forever!!"

But did the suspense really kill Horace Mann is the father of you, Fish Roberson? the American public school sys.

Despite the fact that the fish tern. were so worried the day progress-ed rather nicely. Signs all over One hundred . and twenty men campus proclaimed, "ODD DAY Is accompanied Columbus when be here", and "Happy Odd. Day". True discovered America.

kind of fool would Invest In a business that: Is without profit? Has Impossible hours? Is Involved In one disaster after another? That even asks for blood? '!Je hopeyou'rethat king ~ffool.

MANUSCRIPTS should be sent to the OFFICE OF THE PRESS

NATIONAL POETRY PRESS 3210 Selby Avenue Loa An;ele1, Calif. 90034

Only with tho ponnl11lon of Congt•e.. may an offloor In tho , \1, 8. Oovornmont aooopt a title of nobility or order of honor from anather country,

thed gopbb ne~g or.

The Aa•lcaa Red Croaa IMnlll~ MII.,IHtlll ftf Ull IIUIIIID IDH • ,

\~

.j ,,',

•' .. '.I

., ''

" .I

Page 4 THE BELLS Mllrch 26, 1973

Have You Got What It Takes? MH-B Girls Cage Team Ends 4-2

Early in the month of January of 1972, our BSU learned of a Mexican Baptist Church in Valle Hermoso Mexico in which BSU students from Temple Junior Col­lege had worked the previous summer. When the opportunity be­came ours, the decision to say yes was made in faith and trust that the Lord would provide finan­ces. Under the special leadership of the Mission Committee and its' chairman Norm Kelly, plans were formulated and carried out. We turned to Baptist Churches who have continually been the primary support for BSU, and soon we received enough finances to send out a team of thirteen students. Supplies were given for Vacation Bible Schools. Preparation also consisted of training sessions for the mission workers.

After arriving in Valle Hermo­sa we began a five day Vacation Bible School with a morning and afternoon session. Each session had a different group age of children. Four age groups were taught. The pastor told us of the need for his

lnt'l Student Conf. Planned for Easter -Twenty Mary Hardin - Baylor students will travel to Lakeview Methodist Assembly in Palestine, Texas, to attend a conference spon· sored by the Baptist Student Union of the Division of Student Work. Last year, 600 students from more than 60 countries attended.

Scheduled to begin on Apri 20, the conference will provide a three-day vacation for those for­eign students unable to return to their homelands during the school's Easter holidays. The conference has been held for 20 years.

Guest speakers for the annual event include William M. Pinson, Jr., Associate Professor at South­western Seminary; Theo Patnaik, Associate Secretary of the Baptist World Alliance for Youth Work; and Benton Williams, Consultant with International Student Work and National Student Ministries in association with the Southern Bap­tist Sunday School Board. William R. O'Brien, Southern Baptist Mus­ic Missionary from Semarang, In­donesia will conduct the music ministry.

All interested persons should contact Richard Mangum, BSU Director, Mary Hardln·Baylor cam­pus.

congregation to serve alongside us in order to continue the work af­ter we left. The peoples response was very gratifying.

During the evenings, the church and BSU students held a revival meeting. Students shared personal testimonies during the week, and many sang special music. Each ser­vice was conducted entirely in spanish and every evening, a choir consisting of students and church members sang a special in spanish:'

One of the purposes of a mis­sion trip is to provide opportun­ities for students to discover God's will for their lives and to serve their Lord in new ways. One young man, with the aid of an interpre­ter, preached his sermon upon the request of the pastor. The local school district opened their class­es to our group. For one hour each day, our students taught En­glish. As a result of our spirit, a young teacher, a Christian mem­ber of the Baptist Church, gave a witness to a student who asked why United States young people took time to come to help them. The principal has invited us back this summer.

If you are interested in being a part of the 1973 Mexico oppor­tunity, please contact Richard Man­gum, BSU office or Box 546, MHB.

MH-B Baseballers Win Over Hood

Jack Spence fired a no-hitter last Thursday night as the Mary Hardin-Baylor College baseball

The Mary Hardin-Baylor Col· lege girls basketball team ended the season last weekend with a 4-2 record. The team, coached by Mrs. Sue Hix, competed at the Texas Commission on Intercolleg­iate Athletics for Women Tourna­ment at Trinity University in San Antonio, where nine teams were entered.

"We lost our first game to a very tough team from Southwest Texas State University in San Marcos," commented Mrs. Hix. "But, the second game against Trinity went back and forth, and ended with us behind by only two points."

The team this year was relative­ly young, and all players will re­turn next year. Members include junior Deborah Sims, sophomores Donna Stapp and Rayma Tate, and freshmen Dickque Lucenay, Deborah Shirley, Jenelle Stewart, and Mickie Rose.

"I couldn't have worked with a better group of girls," said Mrs. Hix. "They were very loyal and faithful to me as a coach. We made a lot of progress during the season. This was my first sea­son to coach," continued Mrs. Hix, "and we all learned together. I feel we'll have a strong team next year."

High scorers for the season in­cluded Donna Stapp, Dayma Tate, and Dickque Lucenay, according to Mrs. Hix.

MH-B Youth Swim tlasses Scheduled

club defeated the Fort Hood non- The Mary Hardin-Baylor Col­division team 6-1 in a game played lege youth summer swim program at Fort Hood. In addition, Spence, will be held in two sessions, June who is a lefthander, struck out 4-15 and June 18-29. 13 Fort Hood batters. Classes will be for non-swim-

MHB took Hood pitcher Lefty mers, beginners, advanced begin­Travis for a pakr of unearned ners, and intermediates. The fee runs in the first inning, and got will be $10 for one child, $18 for three earned tallies in the fourth. two children in the same family, Larry Stewart, Johnny Pechal, and and $24 for three children in the Billy Martin led the MHB batters, same family., ..• .~ , who were held to six hits. Instructors for the program will

The Fort Hood team· got its only be Mrs. Barbara Chaney and Mrs. run in the fourth inning as the Sue Hix of the MH-B physical MHB catcher missed the batter's Education faculty. Registration third-strike ball, and overthrew information may be obtained by first base when the batter ran. The co.ntacting Mrs, Chaney at Good­game was the first outing for the man Recreation Hall on the MH-B newly formed MHB baseball club, campus, 939-5811, extension 55 and is the first season MHB has between 9 and 4 p.m., or call had a team. The team is sched- 939-1485 evenings. uled to play again Thursday night. A pre-class meeting for all

Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Iceland comprise the Scandanavian countries,

swimmers and parents will be held June 2.

War on Crime

S), What can you do ; .. ,,.with a 21 year old ~0:.! girl who hates , .. :~~\ ...... spinach? .: ·

A public education program on the problem of organized crime Is being opened by the Texas Or­ganized Crime Prevention Council.

The Council, established in 1970, Is co-chaired by Attorney General John Hlll and Colonel Wllson E. Speir, Director of the Department of Public Safety. It is a subsidiary of the Texas· Criminal Justice Council. .~

. '·'s ~. ' .. ~ ,,:' ·•

<' o '\)~• \1 f I

·,.•

.. Take her to

the P~ft •

; The world's best pizza. • ICE COLD DRINKS

Gambling, narcotics, auto theft, prostitution, Joan sharklng, credit card fraud, and Infiltration of leg­Itimate businesses wore classified by the Council as Initial target areas of criminal activity.

Stnto enforcement officials say crlmo organl~ors do not operate todny In tho classic atylo of tho Mafia, but thoro nrc slmllarltloa.

"Wo know aomo of thoao people havo ayndlcnto connections, but wo don't bollovo thoy aro updor tho dlroct conh·ot of tho national cJ•Imo cartel. Uowovor, tho results are about tho Ramo," Attorney Oonel'al Jllll commontod,

"With tho cnnpoi'Utlon of tho nowa modla throughout tho alate,

Militants? Storrs, Conn. (LP.) - Only 10

per cent of the nation's black col­lege students are militant in the eyes of their peers. This finding is one of many reported in a sur­vey conducted by a University of Connecticut assistant dean of stu­dents.

When asked if the militants were in control, Dean James Lyons noted, the . respondents were evenly divided. Twenty­seven per cent said yes, and the same number said no. Perhaps more telling than the percentages were some sample comments:

'No, our black leadership group is responsible and seems interes­ted in maintaining high academic records."

"No, the group in control ap­pears energetic, responsible and goal-oriented."

"No, our miltants for the most part are angry young men and only one or two have any real problems."

"No, the group in control ap­pears to reflect mature judgment and leadership."

"No, the group in control are moderates who are working hard to build something good."

"No, our control group is just damned committed and concern-ed."

Perhaps equally interesting was Dean Lyon's survey conclusion that it is not the liberal North-

Dr. Kissinger's Visit to Asia

(Continued from Last Week)

· -The normalization of the re­lations between the Democratic· Republic of Vietnam and contri­bute to the cause of .peace in. Indochina and Southeast Asia.

Dr. Kissinger and his party ex­pressed warm appreciation for the: hospitality extended by the Demo­cratic Republic of Vietnam. Both sides hope that this visit will mark the beginning of new bilateral re­lations. Dr. Kissinger's Meetings In Pe"ing U. S. • People's Republic of China Communique Following Dr. Henry A. Kissinger's Meetings With Chi· nese Luders. February 22, 197~

Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, Assistant to the U. S. President for National Security Mfairs, visited the P,eo­ple's Republic of China from February 15 to February 19, 1973. He was accompanied by Herbert G. Klein, Alfred, Lee S. Jenkins~ Richard T. Kennedy, John H. Hol­dridge, Winston Lord, Jonatha T_ Howe, Richard Solomon, and Peter­W. Rodman.

Chairman Mao Tsetung received Dr. Kissinger. Dr. Kissinger and members of his party held wide­ranging conversations with Pre­mier Chou En-lai, Foreign Minis­ter Chi Peng-fei, Vice Foreign Minister Chiao Kuanhua, and other­Chinese officials. Mr. Jenkins held

east schools. which are takin? ~he parallel talks on technical subjects lead when 1t comes to ad101tt~g ·with Assistant Foreign Minister­blacks. He . found that the M1d- Chang Wen,chin. All these talks: west complied the best record were conducted in an unconstrain here with the East tied with the ed atmosphere and were earnest West for third. frank and constructive. ~

Dean Lyons reported the great­est agreement among his respon­dents occurred when queried on black studies programs and the need for more black teachers. Sixty-seven of 68 campuses con­curred on these two goals.

Dean Lyons also found evi­dence that the larger a black stu­dent community on campus the smaller the participation of in· dividuaiS ·in block orgariizaUon programs.

"In those schools where there are fewer than one hundred blacks, most of them are actively involved In the organization. When the number goes above this f i g u r e, participation . declines. This can be explained In several ways," he stated.

First, he said, the larger the group the greater the likelihood of conflict. Then, he continued, as the numbers grow, communica­tions become a problem, Finally, he found that the larger popula­tions often give birth to second and even third black student or­ganizations,

Although Dean Lynos does not address· himself to tho possibility, It appears that a similar pheno­menon and set of circumstances exists in tho white student com­munity,

The U of C black administra­tor also pointed out that 62 out of 68 campuses surveyed had black student organizations with the most popular 11amos "Black Studont Oraanlzatlon," fol­lowed by "Black Student Union."

Regarding black leadership, Dean Lyons obaervod that one­third of his rospondonb believed that tho most articulate studonta woro tho ones who acquired the mantle of loadorahlp.

'They wore not alwnys tho boat leadora, but poaaosaod the •rap' necessary to kcop the orgnnlza· tlon moving," Tho student loaders wore reported by nearly one-four· th of tho cnmpuses afl being In acndomlc difficulty. This wn1 at· trlbutcd to tho tlmc roqulrod to handle londorshlp reRponslbllltloa.

The two sides reviewed the de­velopment of relations between the two countries in the year that bas passed since President Nixon's visit to the People's Republic of China and other issues of mutual concern. They reaffirmed the prin­ciples of the Joint Comminque is­sued at Shanghai in February 1972 and their joint commitment to bring ·about a normalization of re· lations. They held tliat the progress that bas been made during this period Is beneficial to the people of their two countries.

The two sides agreed that the time was appropriate for acceler­ating the normalization of rela­tions. To this end, they undertook to broaden their contacts in all fields, They agreed on a concrete program of expanding trade as well as scientific, cultural and oth­er exchanges.

To facllltate this process and to Improve communications it was agreed that In the near future each side wll1 establish a lalson office In tho capital of the other. Details wlll be worked out through existing channels.

The two sides agreed that norm­albmtlon of relations between the United States and the People's Re­public of China wlii contribute to tho rolnxatlon of tension in Asia and In the world.

Dr. Kissinger and his party ex­pressed deop appreciation for the warm hospltallty extended to thorn. ---o---

HI L P WANTIDI .. "''·

• COZY DEN ATMOSPHIRI! wo bollovo wo cnn nle1•t Toxnna -------------­ $1 00.00 weekly po11lble ad· dreulng mall for firma -full or parttlme at home -Send atamped aelf·addrened evelope to1

(i... ;~'~. • TABLE SI!RVICI

~ "" .. Temp!.

1130 Thomton Lano 773·1122

01072 riZZA I~UT, INC,

Killeen 2103 laat lanclor ,, ......

to whnt tho Pl'oblom IR and how thoy, as lndlvlduniH, cnn holp ua combnt Ol'lllllllzod c1•lmo," Cnlonol Spolr noted.

Tho Council WRR crontod hy ox­ocut.lvo order of tho Governor to holp coordlnnto wm•k In ToxnR ot Inw onforcomont ngoncloH In tholr fight allnlnMt orunniJod orlmo. The public oduoatlon progrnm wna Ill·

sided by tho J4aw Enforcomont A11slstanoo Administration, U. S. Popm·tmont of Justice, through tho Gnyornor's Criminal Ju1Uoo Coun­cil .

ln addition to a pnbllo oduca· tlon program, the Ol'llnnlzoct Crlmo Prevention Council will aook cor· taln now Jnw1 to holp wngo wnr on organlaod crlmc In Tcxa1.

HOMI WORK OPPOIITUNITIII lox ltl

lluldoao, New Mtxlto 11141

Iii z:msnzn=si!!l""sszr rmrrn 1 FD!f!JfFIIIWIIIII

RAS Presents '

Temple Boys Choir In H.M.S. Pinafore

The Royal Academia Society pre­sented the Temple Boys' chojr in Gilbert and Sullivan's immortal light opera H.M.S. Pinafore last Tuesday, March 27, as the Socie­ty's Spring Open Meeting. Approx­imately 50 people from MH-B, Tem­ple and Belton were in attendance in the new Lillian Shelton Harrell Performing Arts Theatre. The au­dience was intrigued by an unfor­gettable hour of delightful enter­tainment by the 23 member group. Directed by Paul Blackstock with

No. 22

WOol-- Sheep to Blankets Textiles Class Takes Field Trip

On Tuesday, March 27, the Tex­tiles class of the Home Economics Department traveled to Brown­w~d to tour the wool mill lo­cated there. We finally arrived at our destination with the help of three sets of directions and two service station attendants. You wouldn't think that ten fe­males could miss so many land­marks, would you? After we found the mill we were cordially greeted by one of the executives who agreed to show us through the mill.

acid, which dissolves all the im­purities. The label can then read 100% wool. The cloth is then washed (which includes shrink­ing), drycd, and placed on a nap­ping machine which makes it fuzzy.

It is then taken across the street where it is cut, folded, and packaged to be shipped.

Robert Handlin at the piano, the We began at the back where operetta made Tuesday evening raw wool is brought in. Black, one to be remembered by those in · light blue and white wool are

1 ' ' attendance. The Temp e Boys blended together to form the

The wool can be dyed at any of three times. Fiber dyed refers to dying the wool before it is blended. :Yarn dyed means the yarn stage is dyed and if the wool is piece dyed, the actual cloth is. dyed. The trip was very interesting and educational for everyone involved.

Choir will again present H.M.S. blena needed to make the pro­Pinafore along with additional se- ducts. During our visit they were lections from such well-known working on an order which re­productions as Oliver on April 13 quired gray wool.

The members of the class who went were Mickie Rose, ftobin Murff, Lisa White, Carol Roen and Johnnie Reynolds. Others were Rhonda Huston, Harriett Hess, Barbara House, and Veron­ica Hopkins. The class was ac­companied by Mrs. Helen Ball, head of the Home Economics De­partment. Gene Cotton

and 14 at the Temple Civic Thea­ter. The boys will be in a .ticket selling contest for the performance and tickets may be purchased from individual choir members.

The second step in the process is the carding. Here the fibers of wool are gently pulled so they will lie parallel •to one another. Next the wool is made in to long rovings which are twisted into

Meet Gene Cotton Let's Go Metric yarns. The yarns are then spun SPECIAL NOTE on to wooden spools and later I would like to take this chance

In August of last year, the Sen- transferred on to cones. From the to thank all the students, faculty, •By GRADY NUTT · from a distance and decided he ate passed legislation moving for cones the yarn is spun on to and administration for your con-

. (Reprinted from The Student mns_t have SPf)nt h~ first twenty- u. s. adoption of the internation- large warp beams. The beams are cern during my recent illness. · · ~ ·· ...... Varch ;~973;_LU/6) .. "' ,.._,..,,.: .... :. · · '· · · · seven ·Yelll'S•:.getting· -read:r · to···' be :at--metric S:Vstel:)l :·trm .:our·.PrlnUlry--:set:'ori •·'automatic~-looms''~-and ·: the· 'Thank~. you·· so · much·· for : .. car.ds,

Gene Cotton • • • his easy best those weeks together. system and comparatile action is weaving begins. If · any yarn letters, visits, and most important-folk singer Guitar in hand, he mellows a tune anticipated in the House. From breaks during the process the ly for your prayers. May God

father until James Taylor shifts restless- a number of viewpoints this is a machine stops automatically. richly bless each and every one friend ly. Simply clad, he is part of the most responsible decision. After the cloth is woven, it is of you,

gentleman "grubby" scene - not to identify In the first place, we are now run thru concentrated sulfuric Mike Williams gentle man with youth, but because he is the only industrial nation on ---------------------------

gifted youth. Cross-legged on concrete, earth not on or moving to the composer in bell jeans and moccasins, he metric system. It is estimated that

communicator spent his afternoons with curious with metric-sized products we'll christian clusters of kids talking about his open up as much as $10-bUlion

one.man way station for pilgrim faith-a faith that is attractive be- additional foreign trade and heav• youth in search of understanding cause it is quiet, subtle, honest. en knows with our trade 1m-

friendship A native of Ohio, Gene didn't balance we can use it. Continu-strength become a Christian until he was ing to use our customary system reason to live. old enough to vote and get mar- places us in a technological trap I first met Gene in June 1971 ried without permission. Inspired of our own making and this is

at Glorieta Baptist Assembly. We by tho folk music of tho late ftO's inane in a world where all are t t t In I Plr a d t , moving to a single technology,

:,or\n~;n ~~: th~~sand ~co:~t and early 60 s, ho took over tho Although the move will be ex-thorn 10,000) youth in the next five guitar and the hearts of those who pensive, evidence is such that fall· weeks. I watched him up close and began to bear him. Ho now plies uro to chango will bo mora costly

tho country in a van and a station in tho long run

Gene Cotton In Concert

Mary Hardin-Baylor CollOID will present folk singer Gene Cotton in a froo concert Thursday, April IS, at tho now $800,000 Maboo Stu· dent Center on campus at 8 p.m., accordlnll to tho olflco of Dr. Dorothy McConnell, Dean of Stu· dents.

Mt•, Cotton spoclallzoa In cam. pua concerts and has been alnl· lnl profosalonally alnco 1982. He haa recorded throe albuma and two alnalo rocord1, and soma of hla own songs have been pub· llahod and recorded by other pro· feaalonal alngor..

Dr. McConnell aald the concert for MII·D atudonta will be free and open to the public. She par• tleulnrly extended an Invitation to )'OUnl people who enjoy whole· aomo folk mualo.

Plno trooa aro lela likely to bo ttruck by lightning becauao tholr roaln lntorforo• with their oon· duotln8 of elootrlolty,

wagon with his beautiful and ta· ' Ionted wife, Marnie, his two-year· Domestically a shift to motrlcs old son, Christopher, and a group will create some confusion for he calls "other musicians" They both the public _and business, but

· in tho long run we'll probably sing In gyms, ~udltorlums, church- loam It bettor than our present cs, civic contou, and ~ccaslonally system. After all, how much outdoors. He wouldn t consider sense 111 thoro to a system that doing anything else. Ho wasn't asks you to relate 12 inches to a meant to do anything also. Ho foot, throe feet to a yard, 36 could ,bo a photographer or carpon- inches to. a yard, 1,760 yards to tor-I m Iliad he found the guitar tho milo or ft,280 feet to tho milo? first. With motrlcs wo measure simply

He hall four albums now. The -for length tho meter Ia divided latest, "In tho Gray of tho Morn· Into decimeters (1/10th), centl· lng" Is getting good play in Now motors (1/100th), mllllmotora (1/· York, Nashville, and other cities lOOOth) _ all you do Ia movo a particularly through ono of Gena's decimal point! Tho syatom 11 ao own tunas: 11Loan on One Ano- much more logical than our own. thor." Tho chan(loovor will also en·

Coaat to coaat and heart to couraao ua to update our atand· heart he moves, a gentle man-not arda and apoclflcatlona for pro­in quest but In procoaa. He know• ducta, offorinll ua an unprecoden· who ho 11 and hurta for thoao ted opportunity to improve them who'd llko to know themaolvoa, and cut out tho unnoco11ary var­Whon tho Cotton• are homo, tholr loty whioh lncreaaea coat. bill old houao In Naahvlllo Ia al· Quick action on thla vital logll· ways full of kida who need a Jatlon would be a aorvlco to place to atay or aomo help along America'• economlo future, the way, I have only known two other peoplo I'd call lOad-thor· ouahly and unapologetically •ood -and Gefle Cotton Ia tho third. You don't have to au••• that I lovo him and thank hlm that wo oan "Lean on One Another."

Loan on hlm aomttlme , , ,

Miss Jordan Named Best Dressed Coed "But I don't know who the

best dressed coed is." That was the response given mpst of the

Jennifer Jordan

time when a student was asked to vote for the best dressed coed on Wednesday, March 28. But af­ter a few minutes to think, most of them put down someones name. And the someoncs name that most of them put down was Jennifer Jordan. Jennifer is a 19·year-old sophomore from Hous­ton.

Aside from her studies, JennHe·r sings In the Rogalians and was second runner-up in tho 1973 Miss Mary Hardin-Baylor Pageant. Sho enjoys singing, sports, and sew· lng, In tho past, Jennifer has made some radio commercials and aho thinks sho would llko to go Into some typo of TV work af· tor graduation.

Jennifer was chosen as tho best dressed coed from among the stu. dents on campus, because of her fashion sense, polse, and charm.

Congratulations, Jonnlfor on be­Ina chosen as the beat droa&ed coed of MH·B.

Are you nostalgic about the outdoors? Do you enjoy tramping thru the woods?

Come to the

RA OVERNIGHT

April 6 & 7

Food and Fun Test Your skills against the wilds of nature!

·-·

l ..

i_'

THE BELLS April 3, 1973

Warrant Officer C. Ernest Williams

Summer Jobs In Austria

·.i

The Power Of One

Capital Punishment: Back from the Dead

that concerns many thoughtful members of Congress. They be-

We are always saying that one lievc and there is considerable person cannot do much to change evidence to support them-that the world . . . but . . . one per- the effectiveness of punishment son, Madeline Murray O'Hare, the as a deterrent lies not so much atheist crusader, succeeded in in its severity as in its certainty. making it illegal to read the And one major problem with Bible in public schools. Now she many present-day systems of cri-has obtained 27,000 signed letters minal justice is that the certainty protesting the decision of the of punishment has been seriously astronauts to read the Bible as eroded. Either we have not per-a Christian message to the world fected means of apprehending from their spacecraft while or- criminals, as is often the case with biting the moon in December, drug traffickers; or, once caught, 1968. She plans to present these we have found ourselves unable letters to NASA with the demand or unwilling to produce convictions to prohibit any further demonstra- r.nd penalties that will stick. tion of religion by public leaders. Capital punishment, if it is re-

You arc but one, but you can instituted in this country, is not do something about this! An cf- by itself likely to change that fort is being made now to secure fact of life. Perhaps renewed dis-1,000,000 signed letters commend- By Ron HeiJdren cussion of the death penalty on ing the astronauts for their ac- Capitol Hill will be sufficient tion. This would be an overwhelm· WASHINGTON-Last week, less

f warning to the courts and penal ing defeat for Mrs. O'Hare, and than a year a ter the Supreme · institutions that they arc not do-a great triumph for religious Court struck down cap1tal pun-

faith. Do not let her succeed ishment, President Nixon sent leg. ing their job. But that is not like­with her ruling because you do islation to Congress that would ly, because so long as courts arc nothing. Here is what you can do: revive the death penalty for a host crippled by impossible case over­write a short letter to NASA, of serious crimes. loads and conflicting criminal

codes, there is little they can do stating the following however you The action came on the heels of · by themselves. w1sh: a United Nations report which

· I 11 In the final analysis, Congress Dear S1rs - persona Y appre- revealed that executions, far from · d h 1 h t dl t may go along with the President, cmte an w o e ear e Y suppor being on the way out among U.N. h · · f th t ts t because of the public mood, be-t e dec1S10n o e as ronau 0 members, are in fact a widespread

d h B.bl f th · p c cause they share his frustration rea t e 1 e rom e1r s a e- and increasing form of punishment ft th b·t d the moon about growing crime rates, and be-era as ey or 1 e throughout the world.

d · D b 1968 I further cause Mr. Nixon possesses unusual s~;~~~t t:~e~g~~· of ev~ry human Only 27 of the U. N.'s 132 nation clout for a second term Repub-being to express their faith in members have done away with the lican President. But there are God and the Bible publicly with- death penalty, either by law or many congressmen who, if they out fear of censure. Sincerely, in practice. Of the remainder, 101 succumb to the public and poUt-

Any student wishing a summer etc. Be sure to sign your full still employ executions routinely ical pressures which are sure to

C. E. Wiliams To Represent MH-B/Texas job in the country of Austria name and your full address. and for crimes of varying severity. be brought to bear on this issue,

· should apply now. Paying student You can do something! If the report is to be believed, will not do so enthusiastically. jobs are available on a first come, most people in the world favor They know that capital punishment

Warrant Officer C. Ernest Wil­liams ~f Mary Hardin-Baylor Col­lege will represent the State of Texas in a national extemporan­eous speaking competition in Washington, D. C., June 21-23.

Williams has no formal speech training, but recently won the right to represent Texas and Mary Hardin-Baylor College in competition held in Dallas and sponsored by Phi Beta Lambda, national society for college men and women studying business.

Williams is working toward a business degree in accounting while on loan from the U. S. Army, He is the father of three teenagers and a veteran of the Vietnam conflict.

---0·----An Open Letter From the Editors

Deat• Fellow Students: In the past we have received

much criticism for the quality of our pnper, hut never as much as we aro presently hearing.

Running a paper is not eMy­wc as a staff have limitations as individuals and as a group.

As always, we arc wllllng to ac· cept articles written by studonts. If there Is something going on or soon to happen, get it In ,other· wise you run tho risk that we won't hear nhout it.

It Is your paper-wc'1•e only In cl1ar11e. If you want to sco chnnges mndc, we welcome your help in mnklnu them.

The UEU .. S staff

first served basis to any student the death penalty, and that is why is not among the real answers to ages 17 through 27. 'Ihe majority E • f I TV their governments employ it as the crime problem, and that a of jobs are in hotels, mountain xperlmen a . an "efficient" tool of criminal careful restructuring of the crim-and lakeside resorts, and restau- justice. Even where it is not legal,. inal code would be a far more ef-rants. Standard wages are paid- An e x P e r i me n t a 1 televis- says the report, the death penalty fective deterrent. plus free room and board. This ion-based approach to providing has been resorted to, often without means that only a few weeks on college courses off campus is be- public knowledge. Dr· •· , H•llls' the job easilr earns back the cost ing explored under a $516,450 The paradox between Mr. Nixon of the school charter flight or Federal grant to the University who favors capital punishment and youth fare ticket. of Nebraska, HEW Secretary Cas- a Supreme Court, made up largely p Noted

Most jobs do not require know- par W. Weinberger announced of his own appointees, which be- aper ledge of a foreign language, and recently. lieves the death penalty Is uncon- Dr. W. L. Hils, Jr. has received experience counts less than wil- Funded as a model for possible stitutional is somewhat akin to the notice that his research article, lingness to work, ability to adapt duplication elsewhere in the na- U.N. paradox: these same govern- "The Effects of Immoblllzatlon in to foreign life, and the malnten- tion, the project seeks to provide mcnts which continue to employ the Human Forearm" has been ancc of an open mind. Opportuni- greater access to higher education the death penalty have voted in pubishcd in the Archives of PhY· tics for this practical, inexpensive for people throughout the entire the world body for the eventual sJcai Medicine and Rehabilitation. way to spend time in Europe are Sta.£~~ grant will be used to plan abolition of capital punishment. Dr. Hills, who came to Mary Har-givcn out as fast as students apply. The contradiction is an interes- din-Baylor College in September of and the working papers arc pro- ~:a~8;n 0~n{~~r~::tc!~a~i~~~\a~~~~ ting one, and its explanation may 1972 worked on this research while ccssed. Jobs are matched as closely educational television network. lie, at least in part, In a key con- completing his Ph. D. at Florida a~ possible to each student's Radio broadcasts, videotapes, tape ~luslon from the U.N. report that State University. choice, This work is done by the recordings, and printed materials the death penalty Is always used ;.-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,~ SOS • Student Overseas Services, will also be used for program when a particular problem seems a Luxembourg student • run or- disemlnatlon, to gt•ow out of proportion , , ." ganlzation specializing In helping The organization that will pro· Certainly a host of new capital American student!! In Europe fot• ducc and field test the cxperl- crimes have cropped up in the the past liS years. SOS also pro· mental courses for usc In the last decade, ranging from hljack-vldell tl brier orientation In Eul'- lng and skyjacking to dope pod open university is known as SUN • ope to Insure each student worker (Slate University of Nebraska). dllng, So fa1•, little headway seems a good start on the job In Eur- Plans also call for the dcslsn to have been made by law enforce­ope. of local resource centers to back mont officials to stem this growing

Students Interested ln obtain· up televised courses with tutorial, tide of International lawlessness, lng a summer job In Austria may technical, and counseling scrv· and it Is natural enough to tum obtain application forms, job list- lees. Now bcin.z considered for back to the gas chamber, partly lngs and descriptions, and the the 1073•74 school year are cours- perhaps in frustration because all SOS handbook on earning n trip cs in tho arts, business, and tho else seems to have failed. to Europe by sending their name, humanities, and physical, biologi. And yet, no Important now stu· address, educational institution, cal, and social sciences. dies have come t.o tho fore to sup· nnd $1 (for printing, postage, ad· An unusual feature of tho SUN port the long-disputed thesis that dre~slng and handling) to: Sum- project will bo the usc of market punishment by death is lt:solf a mot• Placement, SOS, Box IU73, research to determine potential deterrent. Other U, N. studies

ALL MATERIALS to be placed In THE BELLS, muat be turned In NO LATER than any Wed• ne1day before the paper the article Ia to ap~ear In, camel out, The artlclea mu1t be typed and ahould be mailed to P. O, Box 538.

Dates of Interest April 7 - National Teachers

Examlnatlona April 14-21 - Spring Holldaya April 28 - Graduate Recorda

Examinations Snntn nnt•bnrn, Calif. 93108, audience size and tho course pre· show, for cxnmple, no domonstra·

---o~--- ---o---- rcronccs of Nebrasknns. blc dltreronces In crlmo rates be· Accol'Cllnll to Einstein, limo is East Is west and west is cast All hhlhor education lnaUtu· tween countries which employ

Crootlvo Writing Workshop (0 a.m. to 4 p.m.)

tho fout·th dimension. on tho lROth meridian. tiona In Ncbrnakn wlll be invited capital punishment and those May 5. - Trip to Wnco -

Brownln.z Library and Ft. Jl'iaohor ,loavo llardy at 0:90 a.m.)

piiiiiiiiiiiii_iii ___ iiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil to take part In tho project, which do not, Likewiao, the be· Couraea validated durinll tho ex· fol'c·and-nftcr plctut·c In countt•lcs perlment will be mado available which hnve llvod with and without to other cducatlonol institutions. tho clonth pennlty Ia pretty much

April

EASTER PAGEANT - 1973 SCHEDULE FOR REHEARSALS

(All rehear11l1 are at Luther Memorial)

2 (M) - 5145·???? - Everybody. 3 (Tu) - 5145-???? - Everybody. 4, 5, 6 - Theae detes ere open to cetch up on perta

which need reheanel eapeclally et thet time. 9 (M) - 5145-???? - Everybody,

10 (Tu) - 5145·???? - Everybody. 11 (W) 5145-??? - Oren rehearael (for filming), 12 (Th) - Open dete for another dren ·rehearaal

p011l~le filming.

PLIAII - IVIIlVIODV COMI I I I I I

A IOOIHanuc liORI of SUN is to the same,

U intorcatod ln any of tho nbovo trips, lnqulro In tho Of· fico of tho Donn of Students.

roulonallzo the brondcaat services, _ _:I:t _:l:_:at:,:hl::s~q\::•o::s::tt:o::_:n_:o::_:f~d::,ot:c::.r:,:ro:::n:o:o.!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~ through t•clays nnd other dovlcos, for usc in other Stntca,

J~unds for the project oro nU• thorlzod undor tho Cooporntlvo nosonrch Act and Titlo III of tho Hlllhcr Eduoutlon Act, und were awarded by tho Office of Eduoa· tlon'a National Conter for Educa· Publlahed weekly at Mary Herdln·Beylor College 11 1 p1rt of tlonal Technology, the atudent activity, Return poat1g1 gu1r1ntHd. ---o Entered et tlie Poat Office In Belton, TtXII, 11 aiCOnd-cllll

When turned looao to food at metter under the Act of March 3, 1873. will, n hor•o will . oat him1olf to Editor -----··-·---··--·-···------ Suaan Keller dcnth, while n mulo will ont only Alllttent Edltora Sheila Rlc;hardaon, Vonle Hopkin• hla flll. Bualnell Man1ger - Janice Andrew•

One Hour Exams­for Better, Worse?

Growing Energy Needs

Newark, N. J. - {1.P.)-Common Unlimited sources of energy t hour test are an unfair and inac- run our f . .

0

.curate measure of the student's and h . actiones, automobiles, bTt omes no onger can be taken

u 1 1_ y, and they . should be dis- for granted. .:ontmued, ~ccordmg to Student The immediate outlook is for a Senate President Tom Mercadante steadily increasing d d f qf Newark College of Engineering. energy which Wl"ll forecman . or

H" b" f . e growmg 1s to ~-ec Io~~ to tfh1s

1 typeh of dependence on foreign sources,

mass es mg: 1rst o _a 1, w ere greater concern about the en­.aommon hour tests ex1st we us- vironmcnt, higher costs and in­ually have. a l_nb teacher, lecturer, creasing uncertainty as to the fu-and a recitatiOn prof. ture.

Each of these people gives the Our national security requires student a different view of the that we >hould have a sufficient eourse material and expresses his domestic energy supply to keep own selective perceptions of what our economy going even if for­is important in the course. The eign fuel imports were cut off student_ must_ try to accumulate a This should have top priority and eompos1te p1cture of what he governmental policies should be thinks his teachers feel is impor- pointed towards the goal of na-tant. tional energy self-sufficiency.

As if this . isn't hard enough, none of his professors may ac­tually make up the test, subjecting the student to testing in areas which his professors may not have stressed.

Thirdly, those students lucky -enough to have one of the profes­sors who makes up the test have an unfair advantage over the rest of the student body since their professor invariably stresses those things which he feels are impor­tant enough to put on the test.

Government policies also should encourage research by private in­dustry. Emphasis should be pla­ced on research and development efforts aimed at greater utilization of existing energy supplies. The nuclear breeder reactor and ex­traction of synthetic gas and li­quids from coal are examples of energy ·sources which have great ?otential. Further down the road IS the harnessing of solar energy and nuclear fusion.

It is imperative that the gov­ernment decision-making process­es ~e speeded up and simplified so mdustry can get on with its job. Environmental factors should be taken into consideration, but they . must be balanced with the ~rowmg energy needs of our na­tion.

''Miracles'' Do you believe in Miracles?

Three MH-B students do. Cindi Vernon, Sheila Richardson and Sa­ra Spreecher, all freshmen, are three-fourths of a Christian mus­i<;al group called Miracles. The other is Larry Dawson, a Belton native.

The group was organized in November of 1972, for the purpose of singing for the Lord, and just plain old having a good time. Group members can tell stories about having a room in Presser that they could can their own, and not being able to start "Day by Day" without cracking up. Other funnies could be the record· ing studio at 2101 Stribling, and hours spent in Richard Mangums office talking his ear off about getting started.

Larry, a 26 year old music ma­jor who lives in Belton and goes to Temple Junior College, used to attend 1\IH-B. He lists music as his main interest, and is in ano­ther group that performs region· ally. The secret past of Larry in­cludes a story about building little boats and floating them, or rather trying to, with Herb Brubaker. Herb says that Larry's always sank. Larry is the only member of the group regularly referred to by his first name, and he is the group's bass player.

Cindi, a 19 year old communi· cations major from Ft. Worth, is planning to be a DJ when she graduates from MH-B. She plans to go to Elkins Institute in Dallas to complete her training after gra· duation. Her other interests are basically music and acting. Since "Vernon" has become more or less

Fourthly, the tests are either divided into equal piles and given to various teachers (or teacher's aids) for grading or divided so that eertain professor's just grade cer­tain problems. This means that some students in a given class can get better (or worse) marks than their classmates for the same work, and if they object to a grade or have questions about the gra­ding they have to seek out as many as three people tG get a decision.

The fifth injustice here is that the students' recitation teacher ul· timately gives the student a grade based on quizzes which the pro­fessor may never have seen.

The whole system of common her pet name, she almost considers hour testing is . ludicrous. What it an insult to be addressed as does it measure? The ability of a "Cindi," and on occasion she has student to psyche out what three failed to hear people who have people feel is important to a sub- referred to her thusly. Cindi plays ject and cross his fingers that plano and sings. this is what the department has f?ara, a 19 year old nursing rna-also found impo~;tant?l jor from Silver City, New Mexico, · There is another problem here says that next to getting her de­which underlies this entire situa- gree, singing is her main interest.

RESEARCH MATERIALS tion. Unless a professor states She was in New Mexico All-State A L L T o p 1 c 5 clearly the goals of his course, the Choir for three years in high

Write or call for your up-to- expected terminal behavior of his school. Ask Sara what it feels date mail order catalog l)f thou- students, and then tests on the like to club a bug to death with sands of outstondlng research basis of these goals he Is playing a cowboy boot. She is also given papers, Enclose $1.00 for pos· a "guess what I want you to know" the name of "Sprecher" by the tage and handling. game. other group members. Sara sings

We Also Do The professor mu·st explain what lead vocals. Custom-Made Resench he Is going to cover and what he Sheila, a 19 yeor old business

COLLEGIATE RESEARCH expects the students to know and major from Austin, Is Sara's sulte-1429 W1rwlck Avenue (Suite 1) be able to do when the course is mote. She plans to teach after Warwick, Rhode Island 02888 over. If the teacher then tests graduation - probably typing. Her

(401) 463-9150 on the basis of these goals his stu- moln Interest, besides music, Is We Need A Local Agent dents will be prepared and the test making jewch·y. She dreams of

'"=~~~~~~~~~===~~w~l~ll~b~e~v~a~ll~d:_. -------- such things as "setting a Camnro - Into a ring, and making a neck· ~-.-- ------ ----

What can you do with· a 21 year old

girl who hates spinach?

Take her to theP~

The world's best pizza. • ICI COLD DRINKS • COZY DI!N ATMOIPHI!RI! • TAILI! II!RVICI

Temple 1110 Themten Lane

771·1 '"

OI07a Pll!l!A HUT, INC,

Killeen tiOI latt ••ncler

.~ ......

lace out of a tree stump." Every­body else calls her "Richardson." Sheila plays tho tambourine, the plano, and sings.

Now that tho proper Introduc­tions arc over, only one more thing needs to be said: Keep an car out for them-Miracles happen In lots of different places!

---0'----:.-

Free Texas Travel Maps are Available

AUSTIN - To help nomodlc vacationers, as well as other Texas motorists, tho Texas Highway Do­pnrtmont has begun distribution of one million copies of tho 1973 Qf. flclnl Texas Highway Travel Map. Tho map Is free.

Urban dwellers particularly nrc hitting \ho road for traveling va· cations ancl three day weekends. People In campora, tont trailers and mobile homos nrc ln search of qulot and an unspoiled spot of nature.

Cnmplllll vacnllonora will find this new mnp 11 trcaaury of In· formation for tholr travels. Jn ad· dltlon to helping with route so· loetlon, tho map hna charta thnt lndleato apoelflo dlatancea botwoon vnrloua aroaa In tho State and the locution of tho 00 State park•. ---,o----

Graaahopporl cannot jump un· lou tho tomporaturo la at lonat Oil dogrooa Fahrenholt, ---01----

John Paul ,Tonoa waa the flrat sront u, s. nnvnl horo,

April 3, 1973 THE BELLS

Woody Brown and Danette Lowry rehearse a scene from "Out­ward Bound" by Sutton Vane.

'The Theatre' ·Presents 'Outward Bound'

Sutton Vane's three-act play, "Outward Bound," was staged Fri­day and Saturday nigth, March 30-31, by Mary Hardin-Baylor College students in the new Lillian Shel­ton Theatre in the Mabee Student Center.

Directed by Charles G. Taylor of Temple, "Outward Bound" was the first drama enacted within the $800,000 student center. It was also the first major production of "The Theatre", the campus dra­ma organization.

The comedy-drama centers ar­ound a group of oddly nsso1·tcd characters who nrc passengers on an ocean lincl' In the late 1940's. The captain and crew have appar­ently vanished and no one knows where the ship Is headed. Sud­denly tho bewildered and puzzled tnwclc1·s come to the realization that they nrc nll dead and headed for .Judgement Day. How each member of the passenger list deals with this l'Callzntlon and the Ex­aminer who comes on board at tho end of tho dny to reward virtue, punish vice, and relieve the con­fusion and foal'S of tho t1·avclcrs made the evening n truly cnjo)'· able theatrical cxporlencc.

Tho ens! Included Mlltc Williams of Ft. Worth RH tho young •rom Prior, who has lost all faith In himself and Is desperately afraid to fnco his flnnl judgomont but finally pulls hhm1clf together to Jlo off to his just J•owarcl. Tho snob­hl'lh nnd nt times cuttlnR MI'H, Cllvedon-Unnks was plnyod hy Mindy noyd of l4nmpnsns, who hl1· gnn to dcmnnd coJ•taln hcnvcnly

concessions. The Reverand William Duke, who is overcome with joy when· he finds out he has not lost his job was played by John Par­uzinsky of Belton and Cindl Ver­non of Ft. Worth played Mrs. Midget, the homely, little cockney woman who is, in reality, Tom Prior's mother. Teresa Hill played the stern and demanding business womun, Miss Lingly, who "must get out of this." Ann and Henry, the t ·.vo younn lovers who took their lives for the sake of love, and arc given 11 second chance were played by Dnnettc Lowery of Killeen, and Woody Brown of Belton. Scrubby, the steward, was played by Jerry Bevers of Temple and Mr. Thompson, the Examiner, was played by Dough Hoppack of Temple.

Asslstnnt director was Laura Adnlr of Ft. Worth. Lighting was by Gayle Lindner of Houston and Carolyn Tlce of El Paso. Sound was by Clll'is ''<'nlkcr of Harvey, Ln., and propcrllc~ wore mnnngcd by Dcllora Dunn of •rcmplc and Eu!lonc Saylo1·, uf Nolanville.

1t w11s a tl'lcndly show, tll\ed with humor, sympat\ly, and amused undcl'stnndlng,

---0>----Alexander Grnhnm llcll was 29

yem·s of a11o when tho tclephono was patented.

---o----On Mcmor\111 Day tho flag

should bo dlspln-yod nt half mast h•om 11unrlso to noon nnd at full lllRSt f1·nrn noon to sunsot,

SCIENCE CLUB MEETING TOPIC; "Death ftnd Dying - A Study of the

Terminally Ill Patient" DATE; April 5, 1973 TIMEa 7t00 p.m. PLACEa Wells Science Hall - 3rd floor SPEAKER1 Mrs. Ann Ogle FUTURE TOPICSa· "Birth, Lifo, end Deeth of 11

Mill Recheel LaRoe · NEXT BUSINESS MEETINGa April 12, 1973

IYIRYONI II INVITID TO ATTINDI

Story,"

---------·-··'

.. ! .•, i

Page 4 THE BELLS April

3'

1973 MH-B Men's Tennis Team Remains Undefeated It was as a meeting of the

United Nations Tuesday afternoon at the Mary Hardin-Baylor Col­lege tennis courts as the men's and women's tennis teams played Navarro Junior College of Corsi­cana, and the men's team remain­ed undefeated for the season.

Eight different nations were represented by the 13 players who pfayed to a 5-1 win for the MH-B men, and a 6-0 victory for the Navarro women's team.

·MH-B's Reijo Tuomola (Finland) defeated Alfonso Pereira (Brazil)

4-6, 6-3, 6-4 in the No. 1 singles match.

Two other men's singles match­es were won by MH-B, as Roberto Trogola (South Africa) beat Juan Inchauste (Bolivia) 6-1, 6-1, and Craig Gold (South Africa) won over Sijed Naeem (Pakistan) 6-0, 6-0.

Navarro's Ronald Inchauste (Bo. Iivia) beat Melvin Collazo (Kil­leen) 6-2, 6-2, for the lone MH-B men's loss.

The Belton doubles team of Trogola and Gold won over the

Inchauste brothers doubles team 6-2, 6-2. Also Tuomola and Col­lazo defeated Periera and Mario Valle (Chile) 6-7, 6-4, 6-4.

The match for the men's team was called "one of the most im­portant of the season." The MH-B players had previously competed in a tournament at Navarro JC. and ended playing each other in the finals and semi-finals.

The Navarro women's team won all singles and doubles matches. Silvana Vrroz (Chile) defeated Sharon Hill (Aransas Pass) 5-7. 6-4, 6-4, in the No. 1 singles

First Game Draws Crowd match. ·

In other singles matches Mag­gie McNeil (Minnesota) won over Debbie Ham (Corpus Christi) 6-0, 6-3, while Neeve Gleen (Ireland) defeated Stephanie Barrett (Cor­pus Christi) 6-1, 6-3. Also, Sandy Marshall (El Paso) beat Janice DeBolt 7-6, 6-1.

The following people were in attendance as the MH·B baseball club played the inaugural game on our home field. Our baseball men defeated a Fort Hood team to remain undefeated. Jack Spence has been outstanding on the mound.

Mary Hardin-Baylor's First Home Baseball Game March 21, 1973:

Bobby E. Parker, Marietta Par­ker, Tom Anderson, 1\lary Lou An­derson, Lewis M. Hilley, Betty Hills, Cathy Hills, Dr. W. L. Hills, John "Red" Murff, Cindy Latham, Sharon Pavoggie Pam Traweek.

Richard L. Mangum, Lisa White,

Lloyd Ruby -Racing Since , 46

MARY HARDIN-BA)'LOR COLLEGE tennis player Melvin Collazo in a::tion against Navarro Junior College of Corsicana Tuesday afternoon. (Photo by Jon Murany)

Lloyd Ruby, the unchallenged misfortune king of bigtime auto racing, says that the bad luck that has prevented him from visi­ting victory lane at Indianapolis will not keep him out of the win­ner's circle at Texas World Speed­way on Saturday, April 7th. Tennis Player Collazo

Glad He Came to MH-B The 45-year-old Texan from Wi­

chita Falls, who has led five of the last six Indianapolis 500-mile races will be trying for the eighth

Sy Jody Donaldson Sports Editor, The Belton Journal

"Melvin Collazo has got the power and he's young. If he ever gets full control of the ball, he'll never lose," commented Dr. Louis Hilley, chairman of the Mary Har­din-Baylor College health, physi­cal education, and recreation de· partmcnt, concerning the No. 4 player on the MH·B men's tennis team.

Collazo, a 6-1. 163-pound ft•csh· man, was born in Scndni, Japan, nnd has lived in Klller.n the last 12 yours. The son of former box­Ing great Modesto "Kid" Collazo, he came to Mary Hnrdin·Balor a[. tcr becoming acquainted with Dr. Ullley nt Mm·gan's Point Rcso1·t.

"My brother, Gordon, who is tennis conch at Temple High School, had recommended Melvin, and serving os rcct•eatlon director at Morgan's Point last summct•, I invited him to compete in out• ten· nls tournament;" commented llil· ley.

"Being only 18, I was able to on­tor both tho junior and men's ell· vision In tho toumamcnt, and I flndcd up winning tho singles nnc1 double.~ titles In both divisions," added Collazo.

"I wna very Impressed with Melvin, and I asked him to accept tho position ot tennis Instructor for the summer," continued Dr. Hilley, "and I was able to work with him on his game during that tlmo and talk to him about playing for Mnry Hnrdln-Daylor."

"I hnd a number of offers from vnt•lous schools, nnd I was act on nttondlntr Southwoat Toxu State UnlvoJ•slt.y In Snn Marcoa until I mot Dr. Hilley. When I came hore liiRt fall, there wore no other ten· nla plnyora (Dr. Hilley recruited tho other throe tennla pJayora Inter thnt fnll, nnd thoy arrived In De· comber,) nnd I wna taklna a rt1k, but It oortnlnly paid ott," aald Co1ln1n.

"Docauae of tho llituntlon, I prnotlcod my gamo with tho wo· men'• loam, but once tho othor throe camo to Mary Hardln·Bar·

lor, I saw that I was on a team National Championship win of his that was far better than any I career in the Championship (In­had ever hoped to be on." dianapolis) segment of the inaug-

"Melvin has so much power be- ural Texas Twin 200's. hind his serve that he didn't find siow talking, fast driving Ruby too many players in high school makes his debut at the super-fast that could return it, and as n re- Texas oval in the Crower Cam suit he didn't get much practice Special, a Chevrolet-powered Eagle on the rc~t of his game. He also owned by Bruce Crower of San was in th() same district with a Diego. boy who W!'llt on to become the Lloyd began his racing career national hir.h school champion, driving midgets in 1946 in Wichi­and that overshadowed him con- tn Falls. He progressed through siderably in loop play," added Hil· motorcycles and jalopies before ley, joining USAC in 19fl7.

"I want to thank Conch Clayton Although he's been constantly at Central Texas College In Kil· plagued with mechanical failures lecn who allowed me to practice at Indianapolis, he has scored with the tennis team he coached. some Impressive wins including They bud the No. 1 junior college two at the Daytona International team In Tcxus, and n hlgh-rnnltcd Speedway. • team In the n:1tion, and tho op. In 1966, co-driving with the late portunity to play against college Ken Miles, he won tho 24-Hours of plnret•s hcl;~:HI me n gt·cnt deal," Daytona and returned to tho continued Collazo. "Bench" again in '68 to run away

"rt·nctlclng with my fellow team· with the second annual Paul no­males het·e has helped me improve vcro 2150 road race for compacts. my ground stroltcs considerably," Ruby hopes to make '73 his big­said Collazo. "This summer I plan gcst season over and a win before to piny on tho national circuit and tho "homo folks" at Texas World take part In tho national champion· Speedway would be a good start. ships in Kalamazoo, Michigan." Qualifying for the twin-bill clas­Collnzo, who just turned 18, will ale begins on Thursday, April IUh still be eligible to play in tho jun- for tho Championship division, lot• !llvision for another yt'ar. followed by time trials for the

"I am really looking forward USAC stock car division on Frl· to traveling to Florida during Ens. day, tor for tho oxporlcnco of playing Startlnll time for tho Texas Twin on clay courts. They nrc much 200's Ia 1 p.m. Saturday, April 7th. slower than regular courts, and I hope to Improve my ground atrokos When tho highest aoctlon of much more," continued tho black· stool Ia placed on a largo bulldlnll haired, brown·cyoc1 Collnzo.

"Dt•, Hilley Is llko no other col· during conatructlon, tho Amorlcnn 1 o go ton n Ia conch: I thInk h o oa ta, _fliiinlliiiiiilaiiiiiidiiilaiiip liiiaiiiyiiiodiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iiit sloopa, and drinks tennis, and ho'a r for us all tho way. no hna a groat 11onao of humor, nnd ho ia marva· Jou11 to work with."

Collazo hnd provloualy advanced to tho qunrtor-tlnnl round on tho Cotton Bowl tournnmont ln. Do· comber. Jlo defeated tho Taxa• . Catholic high aohool champ, and a number of otllor good playora ln tho matoh01,

Tho Mary Hardin-Baylor tennll tenm romalnl undote~tod thl• yoar ln match play,

Hou~~hold 61('/lu(,r'r, (11

' I I. •

Melvin Collazo, Albert Alva, Rod­ney Ball, Irene Barthowiak, Bar­bara Chaney, Don Chaney, Julie Chancy, Wesley R. Wesson, Mrs. Joyce Butler, Mama King.

Wanda Gcnaro, Susan Pavoggi, Helen Wilson, Merle Lucko, Stew­art Smith, Lupe Rodriguez, Gloria Blanco, Alberta Garcia, Mr. & Mrs. J. Taylor, Mandi Taylor, Robert Trogolo, ·craig Gold, Terri Moore.

Ken Stewart, Johnie Pechal, Jackie Reed, Melissa Reed, J. A. Reed, Jalam H. Stover, Charlie Groseclose, Michael Groseclose, Fransein Groseclose, Carlos Stew­art, Mr. & Mrs. Louis Stewarts Jo Watson, Nancy Cornett.

Mrs. John R. Murff, Mrs. Rose­mary Smith, Gail Johnson, Mike Schuetze, Marshall Bishop, Cindy Koehl, Sarah GoodWYn, L. MsLure and Bill Wesson (umpire).

My Neighbors

f"~ '•, -·· •'No Riot really-Just our IJI'OUP of art experaa ducua· elng what artwork to use on qur ehecka."

In women's doubles, MH-B drop­ped both matches.

The MH-B men's and women's teams will play a return match with Navarro Junior College in Corsicana Monday.

Last Friday, the MH-B men's tennis team swept a trio of sing­les matches from Texas Lutheran College in sets played in eBlton.

Tuomola defeated Stew Dahl 6-0, 6-1 in the No. 1 singles match.

Trogola shutout :steve Makele 6-0, 6-0, while Gold did the same to' Jess School 6-0, 6-0.

MHB Golf Team Falls Schreiner Institute at Kerrville

edged the Mary Hardin-Baylor College golf team 315-319 in a match played Monday in Kerr­ville. The schools also played two­man teams, and MH-B won the scratch match.

The MH-B team of William Guess and Butch Price carded the low two-man score of 156. Guess. the number-one player, and Glenn Simpson shot 77's, while. Price shot a 79, 'Jim Thompson shot an 86. and Mike Schultz got an 89.

The MH-B team will play a re­turn match with Schreiner next Monday starting at noon at Leon Val~ey Golf Course.

English mailboxes are called pil­lar posts.

Compliments of

BRITT DRUG CO.

112 E. Centra I - Phone 939-2682

HI ~eRE! .I AM AN APTER~, A WINSL.ESS 'BIRD 'WITH HAIRY FeATHERS.

·' HOW ABOUT A ? . - LITTLE ACTION

FIFTY-SIXTH YEAR MARY HARDIN-BAYLOR COUEGE, BELTON, TEXAS,· APRIL 30, 1973 No. 24 -------------------------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----------------~~=

FOR WHOM the

BELL TOLLS -Jennifer Jordan, recently elec­ted best dressed coed, has many other attributes which few people may not know about. One of these is her adept skill in throw­ing water balloons off of the sun­roof of Gettys. I've heard that she has a pretty good aim so everyone should let this be a warning. Of course, with the re· cent floods we've been having, you couldn't tell if she did hit you. But in the future if you get wet on a beautiful day, just look for Jennifer ..

·--I certainly hope that everyone

had a very happy Easter. It seems that MH-B was represented in many different states for the weeklong holiday. Many various methods of transportation were utilized as students and faculty made a· mass exodus on Friday the. 13th. Of course, everything must come to an end and ten days later we all came back. Well, almost all of us ~e back. Some people waited a ·day or two be­fore they finally staggered in. But now we're probably. all back in the fold and anxiously awaiting

. final· exams. ·

The SLU chapter of Kappa Delta Pi, national honor society for educators and students in education, observed its 2~th anni· versary with a special program and banquet recently. Among the charter members present for the occasion was Mrs. Helen Ball. Mrs. Ball is curently serving as chairperson of the Home Econom­ics Department here at MH·B.

All tho intense ·rehearsal for "Blithe Spirit" will finally como to a climax on May 4 and ~ as tho performancqs nrc given. In the language of the theatre, all I can say is "Break a Leg." CFor tho rest of you, that means "Good Luck.") ·

I hear that some people nrc go. lng to Becky Buie for lessons In poise and grace now, but I want to know somethlnK. Isn't It hard to be graceful on those crutches?

Business Skills Workshop Scheclulecl '73- '7 4 OHicers Elected A special workshop in business majors.

skills will begin June 5 at Mary Registration for these and more Junior Class Hardin-Baylor College, according than 150 other MH-B "Summer of Just a while ago the Sophomores to Dr. Beatrice Huston, chairman '73" courses is scheduled June 4 met together to make plans for of the business administration de- on the MH-B campus in Town- the upcoming school year. To help partment. send Library. Registration time start them off to the right track,

The workshop will be held from will be based on the first letter· they elected, by acclamation, Don-10:20 a.m. to 11:50 a.m. each day, of the student's last name, accord- na Stapp as president. To help Monday through Friday, from June ing to the following schedule: A ease the duties of the presidency, 5 through July 6, and will cost to G, 8 to 9 a.m.; H to M, 9 to Janice Andrews was elected vice· $95.00, including a lab fee. The 10 a.m.; N to R, 10 to 11 a.m., and president. cost rates three semester credit S to Z, 11 a.m. to 12 noon. other elected officials striving hours in college, but is open to all Registration for both the first to make the '73-'74 school year one who wish to improve their basic and second semester will take of union, love and friendship are business skills, Dr. Huston said. place June 4. Second semester Li~a White as Secretary and Cheryl

The workshop involves short· courses start July 9, with the fol- Moore as Treasurer. For a better han_d, the use of business machines, lowing scheduled in the business undestanding of what is happen­secretarial training, office proce- area: ing within SGA and on campus the dures, and typewriting. Princ~ples of Accounting, Mon· class · elected Gayle Lindner and

Dr. Huston said the workshop is day through Friday, 8:40 a.m. to Gloria Mattson as their SGA re­part of the expanded MH-B "Sum- 10: 10 a.m., three hours credit, presentatives. mer of '73" program. Other busi- $95.00, including a lab fee. Those people who were elected ness courses and their schedules Principles of Marketing, Monday to the minor offices, (whose pos­for this summer are: through Friday, 12 noon to 1:30 ition often bas a lot of fun along

Principles of Accounting, Mon- p.m., three hours credit, $90.00. . with it) are Lupe Rodriguez, WRA day through Friday, 8:40 a.m. to Statistical Methods, involving representatives; Becky Buie, bis-10:10 a.m., three hours credit, probability and statistics in the torian; Margie Hennesey, reporter; $95.00, including a lab fee. mathematics department, Monday and .Betsy Adams, pianist. But· the

Advertising and Sales Promotion, through Friday, 8:40 a.m. to 10:10 most fun of all is had by the cheer Monday through Friday, 10:20 a.m. a.m., three hours credit, $90.00. leaders who are Vonie Hopkins, to 11:50 a.m. three hours credit, In addition, MH-B will offer a Sylvia Duckins, and Andrea Har-$90.00. business extension course at Cen- ding.

Senior Independent Study, Mon- tral Texas College in Killen, Per- Also at the 'class meeting the day through Friday, 7:00 a.m. to sonnel Management, from 6:00 p.m. dues were set at five dollars a

ted the Miss Mary Hardin-Baylor Pageant for two years and was Co-Editor of The Bells during 1972. She is a member of lfistorical Phi· Ia Society and .Alpha Psi Omega fraternity. Carolyn is currently dorm chairman of Burt Hall.

Elected as secretary was Kathi Foster, music education major from Quanah. Miss Foster is pres· ident of Sigma Alpha Iota fra· temity and active in A Capella Choir. She is currently dorm chair· man for Stribling Dormitory. Kathi is active in the Baptist Student Union and a member of Historical Phila Society.

Nancy Irvin, social science major from Austin, will serve as treas­urer. Miss Irvin is an active mem­ber and officer in the Science Club and Phi Alpha Theta fratern­ity. She is Chief Justice in Judi­cial and a member of Historcal Phila Society.

RAS Hears Feminists

8:30 a.m., granting from one to to 7:50 p.m., Monday and Wednes- year (or $2.50 per semester). This The Royal Academia" Soc' t fout• ho~rs credit, . and designed day, with registration at CTC, and is payable to Cheryl Moore at any heard members of the Te~~l~ for senior business ad~inistratlon-~inning-:June ..... ., · ~. ·".c .. ··:···:tlme.in .. tbe..Juture..;_ .. ,... . .. , : ...... :;,eJill;iliStc.Study.· .. Group.: at their

Soph.omore Class weekly meeting, Monday evening.

W I L.b w· A • The freshman class met April Mss. Janet Creps, Karen Dittman,

Omen s I InS gain 5 to elect officers to reign during Linda Clonch, and Teri Blanding, their Sophomore year. The offi. spoke to the group concerning

Colonel Wilson E. Speir, direc· Speir said upon being commis- cers are President · Teresa Gantt; various, aspects of the National tor of the Texas Department of sioned a patrolman, the salary is Vice President • Jenny· Holland; Women 8 Movement. The discu~­Public Safety, announced today automatically raised to $743 mon- Secretary • Diane Parker; Treas- sion centered around women s the DPS is accepting applications thly Patrolmen receive additional urer • Herb Brubaker; and SGA struggle for equal treatment under for appointment to the post of longevity pay for each five years Repesentatives • Teri Moore and the law both past and present. patrolman. of service to 25 years. They are Vicki Cates. Other officers are:. Ms. Blanding pointed out that un-

Arid for the first time since the also granted a monthly uniform RA representative • Janice DeBolt; der Texas Law a woman of any State law enforcement agency was cleaning allowance, and receive and Cheerleaders • Janice Pavoggi, age may not borrow money with· created in 193~,. female appli· travel expenses when away from Sara Sprecher, Martha Rhea, and out the co-signature of a man, any cants will be considered for pa- their station. Mickie Rose. Historian is Connie man. Tho subject of women serv­trolman positions. Uniforms, vehicles, weapons, Southerland; reporter is Diana Ro· ing in tho military as combat sol-

Also, tho DPS director noted ammunlzation and related equip· berson, and pianist is Cindi Ver· diers was discussed with the Royal that tho department has been in· ment are furnished. Group lifo non, Academia members. It was pointed creasingly successful In recruiting and hospitalization nrc paid for Plans were also discussed for a out by one person that malo nurses persons f1•om minority groups to the employee, and dependent cov- day at tho lake in May. can often attain positions of res· patrolman positions and said ef· erage Is available at reasonable Senior Class ponslbillty and better pay with forts in this direction will con· rates. Patrolmen participate In Senior class officers have been less experience and not necessarily tlnuo. · the Employees Retirement System more proven ability than a woman.

Spelr said general "Uallflcatlons of Texas as well as Social Securi· elected for the 1973'74 year. Serv· Cases wcro cited where scc1;etar-.. lng as President wlll be Sharon for DPS patrolmen are these: Ap- ty, Vacation, holidays and sick Pavoggl, physical education major los were charged with tho h•ain-pllcants must be 20 through SG leave are as provided for all State ing of executives but wore never years of ago (Inclusive); good employees, from El Paso. Miss Pnvoggl has considered for tho position. Tho moral character; excellent physl· Successful graduates will be DB• r~cs:ded ats class t~rcsldcnt Sfhor group is supporting the Equal

ONLY NINI SCHOOL DAYS cal . condition; height not less sl~mod to tho lllghway Patrol, Ll· 0 wo pas consocu vo years. 0 Rights Amendment to tho Consti­UNTIL PINAL IXAMI aiGINI than 68 lnchca nor more than '76 conao & Weight Service, Motor ~ t~c ro~ghnlng M

1lss

1Mary 11

1ardl

1n· tutlon and Is generally allied with

Inches; weight not less than two Vehicle Inspection Service, or ny or. nron s 8 80 net vo n tho National Organization for Wo· I'm really glad they finally got pounds nor more than SIAl pounds Drivers License Service acco\·dlng 11.lstorlcnl Phlln Society, Alpha Chi men (NOW) and the National w0•

tho new post office opened up. per Inch of height; visual acuity to the needs of DPS and conald· fl ntcrnlty, nnd Phi Epllson Mu fro- man's Political caucus. Tho whole thing looks so won- rio worse than 20/40 correctable oration of personal preference, ternlty. 0 dorfully new. And tho comblna- to 20/20; an.d a citizen of tho Patrolmen oro ellglblo to com· Carolyn Tlco, speech and drnma ---tlon locks nrc ao much fun to United states. Educational rc· pete for promotions after two major from El Paso will serve as Copyrights arc good for 28 play with. They must bo, you can qulromonta are a minimum of so ycnra of aorvlco, Experienced vlcc.presldcnt. Miss Tlcc has dlrec· years. soc pQople at any time of tho soJYIOBter hours of college credit. uniformed DPS personnel Inter· piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--ii day standing In front of tholr Persons selected na cadets wlll eatod In criminal lnvcstlgntlon box going thru tho combination bo naalgncd to Auatln tor an 10.. may apply for appointment to three or four tlmoa. And Ita ao week training achool beginning tho Criminal Law Enforcement much fun to •hare a box with Juno 26 at tho DPS Academy. Tho Dlvlslon, which lncludoa Narco­aomeono alae, Gone arc tho days aalary during tralnlniJ will be tlea, Intclllgonce, Motor Vohlclo when you could ruah ln between $600 per month, and room and Theft and Toxaa Ranger Sorvlcea cla11es, lll'ab your mall, and look board during thla period will coat as vncancloa occur. at It later. Now you may bo look· tho cadet approximately fDII por Speir 1ald applicants ahould Ina at aomoone also's mall. (That month. contact any DPS office or patrol· 11, If )'OU Oil!' manage to got JOUr man for an application, Tho com-box opon ln tho ·break botwoon plated application form should oln11es,) Of oourae, we mu1tn't then bo taken to tho noaro1t roa· doapalr, after all - this 11 lonal, dl1trlct or IUb·dl•trlet DPS progrea1? 1111 office whore tho oompotltlvc ox·

amlnatlon II liven, Tho book1toro nnd rofro1hmcnt

aroa In tho now Studont Contor aro making A bll hit with tho 1tudont1. Everyone aoom• to on· ~o)' the brlghtl)' aolorod •urround· lnl•· Now, If wa could ~u1t gat Blrdlo back , , ,

. UJntellll••• II die .. , ... IIJ to woncler,"

Arrangemontl will bo modo for a phyllcal examination. A charac­ter lnVoltliatlon will be oonduc· ted and tho1a per10n1 who are accepted for omplovment wlll bo notified prolr to bellnnlnll of tho June reorult lchool,

DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC to

Present In Recital SARAH BROWN PAULA LOHSE

DARLA HERRINGTON When: Saturday night, May 5

Where: Presser Hall, MH-8 Time: 8:15 p.m.

SARAH BROWN Ia a junior mualc major from Copperaa Cove. She 11 a pianist. .

PAULA LOHSE Ia a aophomore mualc malor from Killeen. She Ia a alnger.

DARLA H!RRINGTON 11 a lunlor muac major from Belton. She Ia a planlat,

THE BELLS April 30, 1973

The Great Mail Robbery By Ron Hendren

WASHINGTON - After a year and a half of operation, Ameri· ca's latest government Edsal, the Postal Service Corporation, is grinding its way toward crisis as mail delivery grinds to a halt. _Same-day __ mail _service, which at one time was the pride of the nation, has already become a thing of the past_ in many parts of the country. The grand scheme of incorporating the postal system, operating it as a business, cutting cost!! and speeding delivery, has simul­taneously become the butt of a new breed of cruelty jokes.

Former _Postmaster _General Winton BJount, sitting in on one of the early brainstorming ses­sions on the problems of mail

delivery, is reported to have said: "I've been listening patiently now for three hours, and all I want is a simple answer to a simple question: If it is neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night that is holding up the mail, 'then just what the hell is the trouble?

MH-B Men Join Alpha Phi Omega

Thirty-one men at Mary Hardin­Baylor College will become mem­bers of a nationally affiliated service fraternity April 28.

The fraternity is Alpha Phi Omega.· The MH-B chapter will be the Psi Mu chapter, and will be installed at a banquet at MH-B by the University of Texas chap­ter, Alpha Rho.

MH-B charter members are: Joe Mackey, Temple; Richard Neely, Temple; John Bradberry, Temple; Jim Edwards, Herbie Brubaker, Lee Cross, Ken Stuart, Rusty Carroll, Billy Martin, all of Belton; Keith Martin, Killeen; Eu­gene Sayler, Nolanville; Mike O'­Connell, Killeen; Melvin Collazo, Killeen; Freddie Floyd, Killeen; and Joe Juliano of ·Killeen.

Others include Dennis Hines, Gilbert Hines, both of Thorndale; Kerry Briggs, John Dokko, Korea; Donnie Ray Brooks, Houston; Martin Atkinson, Alabama; Mike Schultze, San Antonio; Pedro Tre­

-----... ~

UNICEF Aids Children While the cease-fire in Vietnam

is being implemented, the United Nations Children's Fund is making plans for greatly increased assis­tance to the mothers and children of Indo·China who have been the most helpless victims of the war.

As in Nigeria and Bangladesh, UNICEF will focus its attention and expertise on providing urgent­ly needed food, medical care, shelter and education for children, with special concern for those who have been maimed and orphaned. UNICEF's assistance will be coor­dinated with that of other United Nations agencies.

For over 20 years, UNICEF has been aiding child care programs whereever possible throughout the long conflict in South Vietnam,

Word Records OHer 'Give Away'

Cambodia and Laos. It has also provided some assistance to the children of North Vietnam, using earmarked funds contributed by the Governments of Switzerland and the Netherlands.

Now, UNICEF is preparing to expand existing projects and ini­tiate new ones. Emergency sup­plies are being stockpiled at stra• tegic shipping depots, ready for speedy distribution. UNICEF staffs will also be strengthened in the concerned countries.

Special funds are needed to en­able UNICEF to execute these . plans as quickly and fully as pos· sible. Contributions designated for Indo-China may be sent to UNICEF, United Nations Child· ren's Fund, New York, N. Y. 10017.

Phi Alpha Theta Purchases Books

vino, Mexico; Mel Ward, Austin; Word Records announced plans Richard Toops, Harker Heights; today for a major advancement

The trouble is that the postal corporation has moved too far Larry Latimer, Waco; Dannie Hef- into the youth oriented "Jesus too fast in an effort to cut costs at the expense of service. While ner, Phillips; Bob Chaffin, San- Music" market, with what a the mail volume increased by 2.3 billion pieces over the last two ford; Sotero Lucio, Houston; and spokesman for the company can-and a half years, the number of postal employees decreased by Gary Covin, Blanco. ed "the religious recording in-

The first volumes of books pur­chased for the Mary Hardin-Baylor library by Phi Alpha Theta interna­tional honor society in history have begun arriving. Altogether $250 worth of books have been ordered with funds given MH-B's Eta-Omicron chapter for the "Best Chapter Awardu among 450 chap­ters of the society.

more than 63,000. New machines designed to automate the mail dustry's greatest 'give away' pro-· system were installed without proper testing, and the system has d gram. been designed around other machines which are still on the draw- Letfer tO E ifOr The recording company is of­ing boards. · Dear Editor: fering a free sample recording of Several of the 60-plus volumes

are source materials like the per­sonal papers of James K. Polk and Jefferson Davis, ·while others are monographs covering a wide range of U. S. history.

The haste has resulted in long hours of mandatory overtime , I would like to thank the fol- Jesus Music (Randy Matthews or for remaining postal employees, plummeting worker moral to an lowing MH-B nursing students for Andrae Crouch and the Disciples) all-time low. their active support at the an- to anyQ._ne who write!' requesting

nual Texas Nursing Students As- it. Only top postal administrators haven't felt the crunch. The

old Post Office Department had eight assistant postmasters general. The new corporation has 17 assistant postmasters general and a new category of five senior assistant postmasters general-bureau­cratise which translates to high salaries. Today 20 postal officials are salaried at $42,000 per year or more - as many high-paid executives as are authorized for the entire federal executive branch minus cabinet members.

The new approach calls for centralized automated mailing centers,,, and even before the first of these new complexes was finished and tested, the corporation committed itself 'to spending $5 billion for additional centers. ·

Meanwhile, neighborhood post offices are being phased out and local postmasters have not been allowed to fill vacancies. That, coupled with ever-Increasing growth in suburban population .centers, has pushed local offices to the brink. One California resi­.dent reported It took 14 days to receive a letter mailed from a IJJOSt office only 25 miles from her home. I Members of Congress have been flooded with similar com­plaints. Senator Alan Cranston (D-Calif.) told his colleagues that constituent complaints about mail service in the nation's largest state $Ometlmes reach 100 per day In his office. That level of congressional mail flow spells trouble for the fledgling postal service corporation.

And even the corporation admits It may have goofed. "We probably did go too far In our effort to save money," says As­sistant Postmaster General Murray Comarow.

Save money for whom should be the question: An Increase In first class mail rates from eight to 10 cents per ounce Is prob­ably on the way In the near future. Meanwhile the lokes continue to make their rounds (Smash the Mafia - mail it parcel post) and the mall backlog grows.

------o-----Young Woman-Your Opinion Counts

sociation convention ,recently. "Many- of our artists are mov-These students continuously ing toward a 'top 40' sound," com­

campaigned, with a show of mented Bill Rayborn, director of school spirit seldom shown by Record Promotion for the Waco college students today. company. " 'Gospel Rock' -'Jesus today. Rock'- 'Gospel Soul,' call it what

Without the work and support you want, there is a new sound in of these students, I would not religious music today." have been able to bring back to Rayborn further commented MH-B an office on the Executive that the main reason for the gi. Board, so to: gantic free record program is

Mike Beimer Sue Scibeck "artist exposure." Karen Reinke, Cathy Becker, De: 'This music is not what we lores Cbupik Marietta Bangert have been used to hearing in Druane Roger's, Dorothy Woodard: church. It's new, and is gaining Grace McClaugherty, Becky Bunn, tremendous popularity on the col­Jerry Caldwell, Melba Smith, lege campus." Becky Pettit, Lita Davis, "I know,'' Rayborn said, "we

Sandy Strength, George Bush, will give away thousands of rec­Peggy West Sherry Belanger Ann ords. Even so, we believe strong­Dysart, An~ Reeves, Joan' San- ly enough in this trend to make ders, John Thomas, Cathy Hoff- this offer." man Jesse Valdez Joyce Kerr Interested persons should write

' ' '"WdRe d Cindy Koehl, Cheryl Moore - or cor s, 4800 West Waco THANK YOU! Drive, Waco, Texas 76703."

Sincerely, Bill Harris Second Vice President, TNSA Psi Theta

Psi Theta, the Home Economics Alpha Psi Omega organization, met Thursday, April

Alpha Psi Omega honor fra· 12, for the installation of officers. tcrnlty recently elected its 1973- The officers were slated as fol-74 officers. lows: President, Harriet Hess;

The local chapter of Phi Alpha Theta received the award for 1972 after submitting proof of meeting criteria outlined by the interna­tional council of the organization.

Phi Alpha Theta seeks to pro­mote history through research, en­couragement of good teaching and the exchange of ideas among his­torians. It .is the largest in num­ber of chapters of those- societies -accredited by the Association of College Honor Societies. Members are elected on the basis of ex­cellence in the study and writing of history.

Gene Pruitt, a Hamilton senior is president of the Eta-Omicron chapter. William Harlow is faculty advisor to the organization.

For Girls Only! Do you like to bowl, or swim

or play tennis, volleyball, soft· ball, and basketball. Here is your chance to show your athletic skills. Temple Jr. College is hosting a Sports Day on Saturday May D, from 8:11S a.m. to 4:41S p.m. Sev­eral area colleges will be partici· pating, MH·BC will need a team of liS girl athletes.

Serving as president will be Vice President, Lisa White; Sec­Carolyn Tice, junior speech and rotary, Robin Murff; Treasurer, drama major from El Paso. Mlu Vonle Hopkins; Reporter, Mickie Tice is active in the drama de· Rose; Historian, Vicki McLean;

Your opinion will Influence the shaping of political plat- partment and has appeared In Parllamentarian, Barbara House. forms, Constitutional amendments, lob opportunities, and the such college productions as "Gam· Those officers were sworn in by future of Colleges and Industry. Make sure your opinion counts! mer Gorton's Noodle" and "The the outgoing President Jo. Watson,

We want to know what you think of the Womena' rights Mollusc." She will appear in Noel Also, dues were dcalgnatcd as

If you would like to meet new friend' and enjoy a day of fun come by Goodman Gym and sign up or contact Mrs. Barbara Chaney, ext. 1111.

movement - pro or con, how you evaluate educational opportunl· Coward's throe-act play, "Blithe $12 for the 1973·74 school year, ties and your prospects toward males and the established sex Spirit" scheduled for May 4 • IS. This will Include National affllla· RIIIARCH MATIRIALI roles In society. Mindy Boyd, freshman Be- tion, regular duos, and luncheons. A. L L Top 1 c 1

To participate In this poll, lust send your name, address and havioral Science major from Lam- Further plana wlll be made for Write or call for your up.to· zip code to IQUATION, lox 4307, Sunnyeldo, N. Y. 11104 and pasas will aervo aa vlco proal- tho next year's activities at a date mall order catalog of thou-we will send you a survey form. The results of this study will dont. Miss Boyd is activo In The later date. sands of outatandlna rcaoarch be distributed to legislative leaders, malor corporations and Theatre and waa recently seen in papera. lnclou $1.00 for ,. .. unlveraltlea. tho college production of "Out- tilt end hendllnt.

Thla malor research prolect Ia being conducted by student& ward Bound." A11rt11lve, part·tlmo end po1• Wo Aleo Do of the Graduate Dlvlalon, Bernard Baruch College, City Unlveralty Dualnoas Manager for the fra· albly full·tlmo ael11men to cuatom-Mado ltiiHrch of New York, N.Y.C, tornlty will bo Mlko Williams, work ovonlnt•• Good commla· COLLIGIATI RIIIAitCH

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;. a pooch and drama major from alon and bonuetl. Muat be 21 142t Worwlck Avenue (lulto 1)

Need help with your Grob and Blllias? (Not to mention statistics, English, social psych, French, Political science . , .) Well, we have "expert•" In all these fields!

Royal Academia Society TUTORING SERVICE

For more Information, contact env to 225 Burt, Campua.

P.l.a And belt of all - IT'I Pllll

aoclety member or write

Fort Worth. Mr. Wllllama la an with car, Profor merrltd, Call Warwick, Rhode lalond 02111 activo member in Tho Theatre, 773-4112, t e,m,,. p.m. for epo (401) 461-Ho reoontly appeared In •outward polntment, t110 Bound" and Ia curontly atago man· ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l.l!~~W~o~N~o;od~A~Lo;;;o;al~A;I;O~n~t=d agor for "Blithe Splrlt," -

Alpha Pal Omega Ia a national honor fratornltf for drama and opon to member.hlp for thoao In· tereatod and qualified,

Charlot G, Taylor Ia aponaor for tho oruanllatlon,

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t • atudent activity, Return ~atage guarantied, l!ntered It ttie ,Poat Office In Belton, TIMII, 11 HCOnd-cllll

matter under the Act of Mtrch :s, 1873, Editor ----·--------- luaan ICeller A11l1t1nt l!dltora lh•ll• Rlchardaon, Vanl• Hopklna Bualn••• Man1a1r J1nlce Andrew• Reporter----·--- Mike Wllllama

The Academy Awards UAFA Seeks Execs April 30, 1973 THE BELLS P•ae 3

"Cabaret" Takes All But ''The Best" Eleanor Seiling, President of

United Action for Animals, Inc., I f h announced today that UAA is turn-n a sweep o eig t awards, The top award given by the Mo- ing to the universities in an in-

Salary Difference Noted ••c:abar~t" nearly cleaned up every- tion Picture Academy, that of Best tensive search for young executive Women comprise 22.5 percent of thmg m the 45th Annual Aca- Picture, went to "The Godfather." talent. "A new breed of humane the Nation's 254,930 full-time col-<lemy Awards. The live telecast, The adaptation of the Mario Puzo lege and university faculty mem-March 27 featu d f 1 · leaders is needed" she said, "and bers on nine-and 10-month con-. , re our emcees: nove mto the screenplay was a they should come from the reser-Carol Burnett, Michael Caine, monumental task simply because voir of well-educated young people tracts and receive average salaries Charlton Heston and Rock Hud- of the length of the book. Much now in our universities and about that are almost $2,500 less than son. had to be cut from the story in to embark upon their careers." She their male counterparts, HEW's

"Cabaret" took Oscars for Best order to fit it into a movie format. Office of Education (OE) announ-noted that historically almost all Achievement in Sound, Best Ac- The important elements were all ced today. of the people in animal welfare hievement in Film Editing, Best left in, and all the characters came Compiled by OE's National Ceo-work in general and laboratory Supporting Actor - Joel Grey, across except that of Kay Adams, ter for Educational Statistics, the Best A t D'r ct' B t Ad t M' h 1 C f animal work in particular are data represent estimates for the r 1 e 1on, es ap a- 1c ae orleone's girl riend. This there because of a keen sense of in-tion, Best Achievement in Cine- article wouldn't ·get printed if I justice to animals and a high de- 1972-73 school year and deal with matography, Best Director, and said why she didn't come across, so gree of motivation, but, she ob- instructional faculty in public and Best Actress -:- Liza Minelli. read the book if you want to know. served, "they lack both the abil- private institutions of higher ed-

Other notable awards went to Great performances in "The God· ity. to inform themselvtes ade- ucation in all 50 States, the Dis­"The Poseidon Adventure" in the father" were turned in by James quately and the professionalism trict of Columbia.. and outlying Special Achievement in Special Caan as Sonny Corleone, Al Pacino needed to solve complex prob- areas. Effects category, and also in the as Michael (he was nominated for lems." These preliminary figures reveal Best Song category for the "Posei- Best Supporting Actor for this Miss Seiling is definite about that colleges and universities em­don" theme, "The Morning After." role), and others in the roles of the qualifications needed by can- ploy 197,633 men and 57,297 wo-

Best Supporting Actress was Tom Hagen, movie mogul Jack didates. "A broadly-based educa· ------------­awarded. Eileen Heckart for her Woltz, Lucy Mancini, and Luca tion is esential," she stated, "be- Recent Graduate performance of the nosy mother Brasi, the Don's top hatchet man. cause anyone who is going to be in "Butterfiles are Free." "The Godfather" is an excellent effective in helping animals must Commissioned

Best Actor was Marlon Brando, piece of work and certainly deser- · kill for his role as Don Vito Corleone ved more than the two awards that ~evelo~ a co~pos1te of many s .s. SAN ANTONIO Dale E mcludmg b10logy, law, adverbs- . . · in "The Godfather." Brando turned it got. I have no comments to make ing, publlc relations, and corpor- Schwartz, son of Mrs. ~lllan . M. down the award, due to the mis- on "Cabaret." ate administration. They must be Schwartz,( 5640 Commun!tY. DrlVe, treatment of the American Indian One problem in the film indus- diligent readers and able to write Houston •. has been .. comm1ss1oned _a by the film industry. Shades of try this year was that there were well. They must be adept at li· second lleutenant m _the U. S. A1r George C. Scott! (Scott turned so many good films that many got brary research, competent anal- Force upon ~~duabon. from the down· the same award last year for left out when the prizes were ysts of what they read, and pos- Sch~ol of M1btary Sc1ences for his role in "Patton.") passed around. Examples: "Lady sess the ability to communicate Offtcers at Lackland AFB, Tex.

"The Godfather" also received Sings the Blues" and "Sounder." articulately without being abras- Sc~wartz, se.lect?d through compe-the award for Best Writer and All in all, it was a very good ively vocal." She said that a high- tabve exammatl~n fo~ atten~ance Screenplay. year for movies. ly motivated person with a broad at the school, 1s bemg. asstgn~d ------------- -------------- basic education can develop these ~0 Moody AFB, Ga., for pdot tram­

skills, but that it would take time. mg .. Girls Choir Takes Easter Tour Miss Seiling estimates that it Lteut~nant. for at~endance at the

d · f f · school, 1s bemg assigned to Moody The Central Texas Girls Choir,

directed by Sharon Wilson of the Mary Hardin-Baylor College pre-

paratory division of music, gave wt ou~ requtthre . bourt Y~~rs 0 ~tnh· AFB, Ga., for pilot training. five performances April 23 and 24 enstve on- e-JO ra.mmg Wl The lieutenant, a 1968 graduate while touring the San Antonio UAA to prepare a candidate for the f L Hi h S h 1 . d

"kind of executive leadership We 0 amar g c oo • rece1ve a area. envisage." B. S. degree in_ aviation in 1972

Enroute, the choir sang April 23 from Mary H rd1 Baylor College at 10:00 a.m. at Southwest Texas The President of UAA pointed · a n •

out that there exists a vital need Belton, Texas. State University, San Marcos; and ----a----performed in a pilgrimage to the for · leaders of executive caliber Alamo at 3 p.m. the same day. That in the field of animal we.lfare in Bands Plan Concert evening the choir sang with the general and laboratory ammals in

. Chordsmen, a nationally known particular and that the rewards The combined bands of Mary men's group. are great, personally and profession· Hardin-Baylor College and Temple

ally. "But," she added, "candi· Junior College will present their The April 24 schedule called for dates for this work must show a annual spring concert in the TJC

performances at the Mexican very high degree of motivation." Fine Arts Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. Bible Institute at 10:30 a.m. and Interested persons should write to on Friday, May 4. before the Federated Women's United Action for Animals, Inc., The concert will be jointly con-

~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~C~lu;b~s~o;f~Sa~n~A~n;t~o~ni~o~. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .. 1509 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. The concert will be jointuy con­Iii 10017, giving full details, keeping ducted by director Jim Swett of in mind the qualifications outlln- MH-B and and Bill Hall of TJC. ed. Mr. Hall wlll also lead a stage

band. The concert is free and open Reminder Issued to the pubuc. The program will

vary from rock, pop and jazz to

Compliments of

A reminder on the State law Bethoven, Shostakovltch a n d about motorists stopping for Charles Carter, according to Mr.

men on nine-and 10-month con­tracts and that the male faculty members earn an average salary of $14,352 annually, while females receive $11,865.

The salary gap is widest in the Nation's universities, where men receive an average annual salary of $15,829 compared with $12,325 for women, and it is smallest at two-year colleges where the fig­ures are $12,889 and $11,862 re­spectively.

The survey also reveals that only 9.7 percent or 5,565 of all female faculty members have achieved the rank of professor - compared with 25.5 percent of all males - while 36.8 percent or 21,068 of the wo­men are instructors. Working up from the instructor level, 36.4 percent of females are assistant professors and 17.1 percent are associate professors.

Although no strictly comparable historical data exists. the OE re­port cites an earlier study of uni­versities and certain other four­year institutions to show that the proportion of women faculty mem­bers has changed little in the last 10 years, rising from 19.0 per­cent in 1962-63 to 20.6 percent in 1972-73. This comparison (which ex­cludes two-year institutions) does reveal, however, a sharp rise in the proportion of women with the rank of instructor who now com­prise 43.5 percent of the total for men and women as compared with 30.9 percent of all instructors in 1962-63.

Dingus on· Board Gerald D. Dingus, Associate Pro­

fessor of French, was recently elected to serve as a member of the "Board of Directors of the Central Texas Chapter of the American Association of Teachers of French (AATF). The AATF is the national organization of teachers of the French language at all levels. Its goals are to promote the teaching of French and literature and cui· ture.

The Central Texas Chapter held a workshop April 14, in the For­eign Language Education Center at the University of Texas at Aus­tin. Ms. Sherrill Fisk of Houston was the consultant in the workshop devoted to individualized instruc­tion of Foreign languages. Presi­dent of the Central Teras Chapter Is Dr. William Herold of the Uni­versity of Texas at Austin. school buses was issued today Swett.

by Colonel Wilson E. Speir, di· ------------------------­112 E. Central - Phone 939-2682 rector of the Texas Department

of Public Safety,

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~5ii;i555~55~. Spelr said tho law, whlch ap-i plies on city streets as well as

Announcement: The NATION

Student . Poetry Awards * • * *

OPEN to students, graduate or undergraduate, enrolled full·tlme In any college, university, junior or community college.

THE AWARDS1 A flrat prize of $1 00, and two second prizes of $50 each. Winning poema w111 be publlahed In The Nation, the winners will be Invited to read their work In a public recital aponaored by the Poetrv Society of America,

SUBMISSIONS muat be original, previously unpubllahed poema In Engllah - not tranalatlona - and not over 50 linea In length. They may be In any form on any subject. No more than three ~mt from a conteatant will be conaldered.

ALL ENTRIES muat be typewritten. The author'• name addreaa, and college should appear on the upper rlght·hand corner of each page, All poetrr aubmltted will become the property of The Nation, and wll not be returned. Our regular ratea will be paid for any poema, other than the thrH prize· wlnnera, which we may decide to publlah,

DEADLINE for receipt of entrlea Ia June 30, 1973. Wlnnera will be Informed by mall, and announced In the laaue of October 29, 1973.

Judgea will be four poeta, whoa• nam11 will be announ· ctd after the deadline for aubmlaalona.

* * * * liND ALL INTIIII to1 lltttrv Centltt, t/e Tht Netlen, Ill lllth Avenue, New Verlr, N. v. 10014.

rural highways requires motor· lsts moving in either direction on the same roadway or stroot with a school bus to stop and remain stopped as long as tho flashing top red lights on the bus are in operation. .

He said the problem is bocom· ing more serious In cities duo to increased uae of school buses In urban school districts,

There are only two exceptions to the law on stopping for load· ln.: or unloading a school bua: Those vohlcloa on another road· way of a dlvldod highway (divld· od by median or physical barrier) are not roqulrod to atop, and atop11 are not required If the bus hal •topped In a loading zone of a controlled acco11 highway whore pedeatrlan• are not per· mlttod to croaa,

Speir •aid tho problem of 1ohool bu1 acoldonta 11 of con· corn to law onforcomont offlolala and oduoaton throughout Toxaa. Only a few woek• ago, tho Travla County Grand Jury ur1ed tho new• media to publlolle the law about •topping and not pa11lng a 1ohool bua whioh i1 loading or unloading ohlldron.

Tho grand iurv noted that aer­loUI orimlnal ohar111 might ro· 1ult It a motorllt diare1arda thla

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••a• 4 THE loEU.S April 30, 1973

Men's Tennis Team Takes Tour The Mary Hardin-Baylor college

men's tennis team began a week­long tour of the Southeast United States Saturday, April 14, as the college spring break the week be­fore Easter.

The team composed of Reijo Tu­omalo, Robert Trogola, Craig Gold, and Melivn Collazo, left Saturday by car, accompanied by Dr. Louis Hilley, chairman of the physical education, health, and recreation department at MH-B, who serves as tennis coach.

The first stop for the group was at the University of Southern Alabama at Mobile, where Austra­lian John Eastburn competed against the MH-B team. Eastman bas played in the Orange Bowl tournament, and was the junior re­presentative of Australia. Also, there are a number of other in­ternational players at the Mobile school who gave the MH-B netters some good competition.

Other stops included the Uni-

versity of Western Florida at Pen­secola, Pensecola Junior College, and a match with the Pensecola ProAm team, composed of profes­sional athletes and some of the outstanding amateurs.

"We made this tour for a num­ber of reasons," said Dr. Hilley. "We wanted to give the team some tougher competition than they've had so far this year. Also, we wanted to introduce Mary Hardin­Baylor College to the Southeas­tern states. We distributed litera­ture, such as catalogs and bro­chures, and hope t(\ have interested a number of people in attending MHB. We also wanted to show that we have a very complete program here."

"We also used the opportunity to scout the other teams and play­ers, and possibly did some re­cruiting."

The group returned to Belton on April 21.

Girls Tennis Team Likes Small Colleges By JODY DONALDSON sented Texas at the national tour- ier this spring, played tennis in

Journal Sports Editor nament in Chicago. After being high school, and had a few match-Four lovely, young, freshmen selected as one of the five best es with Debbie Ham, now her team­

girls who came to Mary Hardin- players in the south zone of Tex- mate, but formerly bad attended Baylor College to have some fun as, she attended a tennis camp a~other high school in the "spark­and play tennis- that's the MH-B at New Braunfels where she was ling city'. girl's tennis team for this year, selected on the traveling team, Miss Barrett, a 19-year-old fresh­composed of Sharon Hill, Janice composed of the top five players. man, is Debbie's roommate, and the DeBolt, Stephanie Barrett, and Deb- Janice DeBolt came to Mary two also have a pet goldfish, this bie Ham. Hardin-Baylor through an associa- oine named "El Cid'.

Sharon, who is a native of tion with Dr. Hilley this past sum- Debbie Ham is from Miller High Aransas Pass, was the state high mer at Morgan's point. School in Corpus Christi, and ad-school AAA tennis champion last I worked for Dr. Hilley as arts vanced to the final round in dis­year. and crafts instructor and assistant trict competition where she lost

"I first beard about Mary Har. tennis instructor, and he watched the match for the district crown. din-Baylor when Dr. (Louis) Hill- me play and asked me to come," "Sharon (Hill) told me about ley's (chairman of the physical said Janice. Mary Hardin-Baylor, and Dr. Hil-education, health, and recreation Miss DeBolt started playin~ ten- ley saw me playing during a sec­department at MH-B) son stopped nis during the summer before her tional tounment and called and by our tennis courts at our school, sophomore year at Killeen High asked me to play. I bad planned and I played a match with him. School, and ended up playing on to attend a local junior college, He spoke about the school, and his the varsity team for the next three that didn't have a tennis team, father being coach, and later Dr. years. Her senior year, the squad and I sure was glad when I got Hilley telephoned me," said Sbar- won the district championship. that phone call," added Debbie. on. She is a 19-year-old business Debbie, who is a 19-year-old

Sharon was a member of the major. and was named Most Rep- freshman , was the freshman class Wightman Cup team that repre- resentative Freshman, and says treasurer during the first semes­

MH-B Girls Take A&M

The Mary Hardin-Baylor College girl's tennis team defeated ·the Texas A&M University girl's team 5-1 in action at the MH-B courts Tuesday afternoon, April 10. This marks the second Southwest Con­ference school to be defeated by the MH-B girls, who had previous­

that she has a pet goldfish at ter. MH-B named "Sunshine". All the girls expressed a great

Stephanie Barrett, a graduate of love for Mary Hardin-Baylor, say­Carroll High School in Corpus ing that they liked the campus Christi, says "I wanted to play being small where you could know tennis and I wanted to go to a everyone's name and say "hi" as small church school, so I wrote you go by. Dr. Hilley, and came to Mary Har- "It's like one big family where din-Baylor." you know everyone," stated Jan-

Stephanie, who was named Miss ice. "Here at Mary Hardin-Baylor, Congeniality in the Miss Mary you really are a person, and not Hardin-Baylor pageant held earl- a number."

' ly beaten the University of Texas at Austin in matches played ear­lier this season.

Steph1nle l1rrett

Debbie H1m

ATTENTION! STUDINT·FACULTY SOFTBALL GAMI

May 2 at 4 p.m. on Campu1 IVERYONI WELCOMII

Sharon Hill took the No. 1 sin­gles match for MH-B with a 6-1, 6-2 win over Jane McLaurin. Also, Debbie Ham defeated Meredith Howard 6-2, 6-2; and Stephanie Barrett won over Ellen Buchanan 6-3, 6-1. Janice DeBolt won the fourth singles match for Mary Har­din-Baylor by taking Karen Boe­rner 6-1, 6-2.

The two teams split the two doubles matches, with the MH-B team of Hill and DeBolt taking Boerner and Buchanan 6-0, 6·3. The team composed of Ham and Barrett was defeated by McLaurin and Howard 7-5, 6·3.

The MH-B girl's team tennis re· cord now stands at 4-2 for the season.

---o,---MH-1 Tennis Team Remains Undefeated

The Mary Hardin·Baylor College men's tennis team retained their unblemished record Monday April 9 as they blanked Southwestern University of Georgetown 6-0.

Roijo Tuomola took the No. 1 11inglos match 6-3, 6-1 over Cliff Leonard. Also, Robert Trogola de· Coated Paul Oxley 6·3, 6·3; and Craig Gold won over Marty Har· ria 6·3, 3-7, 7·5. Melvin Collazo took tho final of tho singles match· os for MH-B with a 6·3, 6-2 win over Jay Elder.

In doubles action, Trogola and Gold defeated Oxley and Leonard 6·0, 6·3; ,a Tuomola and Collazo played Hnrris and Elder to an 8·6, 6·4 victory.

---~o---

"Blithe Spirit" Being Pre1ented

Noel Coward's "Blltho Splrlt" I• in rehoal'llal at Mary Hardin· Baylor College with tho play •chedulod Friday and Saturday, May 4 and 5, In tho now Ll111an Shelton Theatre In tho Mabee Student Cantor, Performance will be at 8 p.m.

Dlrootod by Charlo• G. Taylor of Tomplo, .,Diltho Spirit" foa· turo• Laura Adair of Fort Worth, Mr. and Mrt. Dougla• Jloppook of Tomplo, Carolyn Tloo of El Palo, Jorry Dovora of Tomplo, Clndl Vernor of Fort Worth, and RA· mona llarrla of Ft. Stockton,

Alllatant director 11 Jamie CD1aro1 of Lonln, Ohio,

---o~--- ~1nl11 Delelt

FIFTY -SIXTH YEAR

FOR WHOM the

BELL TOLLS -With finals and the end fo the semester fast approaching, the Bells is also closing out another year. This statement will probably be met with sighs of relief from some and cheers from others. I can't speak for the rest of the staff, but for me it has been a very interesting experience. At times it has been, hectic, madden­ing, discouraging, laughable, and tiring. At other times it has been all of these put together.

Thanks to all of you who help­ed make our jobs easier this year by submitting articles. It really was a great help to us, and I hope everyone will continue the practice in the future. Next fall we will probably have a new method of printing which should make the print clearer. Of course, the quality of the articles will still depend on the people who submit them. But, its been a good year and all in all I've enjoyed it (I think!).

It seems that qpe of our brand new sophomores in Burt had a little trouble getting a dorm room door open. When she finally got it open, she said, ... And now _for-

DR. CHARLES LAWRENCE BARKER, Ph.D.

Congress Funds Student Aid for Another Year

"Student Financial Statements" for independent students are available in his office. No financial aid pack­age can be prepared until these analysis are completed.

Poetry VVorkshop To Be May 8

The Congress of the United States all but told President Nixon that they were not interested in his -type of financial aid program for college undergraduates. It passed and sent to the White House an $872 million appropriation bill for financial aid. The Bill calls for funding of National Direct loans, Supplimenetal Educational Oppor­tunity grants, College Work Study and the new Basic Opportunity Grant program. A Poetry Workshop will be con-

ducted in the student center on Eric Wentworth of the Washing-ton Post reports that Mr. Nixon the Mary Hardin-Baylor Campus

on May 8 from 2 until 5 p.m. The will likely sign the measure, but workshop is open · to the public reluctantly. The total money out-lay matched the President's budget for a fee of $5.00 for adults and

$3.00 for students. Mrs. Pat Stodg­figures, but not in the manner hill, a prize-winning poet from that he proposed. The Congression- Dall 'll d t th ksh

1 ·11 1 · k as W1 con uc e wor op.

a measure WI on y g1ve to en M 5 St dgh'll h d th B funding to Nixon's pet Basic Oppor- S rd. 0 f 1 Nas teharTne Set t · . . egree rom or exas a e tumty Grant program. u - 't d th M A d . n1vers1 y an e . . egree

For Mary ~ardm Baylor College from the University of Texas in students, th1s means tha~ those Austin. A former Dallas English on the present .federal atd. pro- teacher, Mrs. Stodghill has won grams can remam there without numerous State and National Poe­having to find new loan and grant try awards is a former Director sources. ~11. ~tudents ~shing to of the Poetry Society of Texas. renew the1r fmancial a1d for the She has studied under James Die­fall semester should pick up ap- key, Paul Engle, and William

. . as ~?on as pos_sible , a~ s~ord. Mrs. s~otighiU.'s ~etry AdmlsslonllFinancnal· ··Aid of- hful been ·published hi vanous .anth­

fice. Mr. Bill Elliott, Director of ologies including the Yearbooks .. my · next· frick • , ';- ;•• After slam~ mini the door for a grand exit she couldn't even get it back open to make a comment. Now I think Cathy Smith deserves to have her Sunshine taken away ·for that. Is that any way for a sophomore to act?

Admissions/Financial Aid said of the 'Poetry Society of Texas.

Ch • I p ,. that his office will begin preparing emls rv ro essor next years financial aid packages • J as soon as possible after the start Water Skiing

T R • D . . of the Summer Session. Mr. Elliott To Be Offered

0 ecelve Oclorale went on to say that the packages . I would like to take this op- would be prepared on what is anti- If you arc interested in learn-

portunity to make a correction cipated as the Mary Hardin Bay. ing to water ski or if you want to about last week's paper. Jennifer Recently, one of the chemistry it with things that are interesting, lor Share of the financial aid ap- improve your skills, then the phy-Jordan does not throw water professors from MH·B completed it helps you lean." German words propriatlon. The only thing that sical education department is of­balloons off of the sunroof of work at Baylor University for his and "Breakfast Table Trivia" can might stand in the way of the aid fering just the course for you this Gettys. She pours whole bucket• PhD. in Chemistry. On May 18, help chemistry become relevant, now would be a presidential veto. summer. First Summer Session, on people. during comll\encement exercises at interesting, and helpful to the He said that in the light of the water skiing will be offered with

Baylor, Mr. Larry Barker wlll of· student. Watergate controversy and other Mr. Hix as Instructor and student flclally become Dr. Charles Law- Dr. Barker and Dr. Jernigan, pressures on the president, the assistant Ken Morris. Two classes Somehow, the rumor got started

In Burt the other night that there was a man in one of the rooms. Of course, it was only a rumor, but one of the girls really took it seriously. She wasted no time in golnll to a friend's room and pleading, "Can I spend the nlaht with you?" Poor Kathy, you really 1houldn't listen to the Flab, they'll tell you anythlnlf.

renee Barker, PhD. the head of the department, both general feeling Is that the bill will are proposed. One class Is on MW Dr. Barkor, who joined the agreed that the purpose of the not be vetoed and the programs from 3:30 to 5:00 and Friday at

faculty of MH·B In June of 19'12, chemistry department is to "ad· all will be carried for one moro 12:30 to 2:00 or 2:00 to 3:30 de­received his BS and MS degrees vance sudents knowledge of the year. pending on student's schedule. The from Middle, Tennessee State Uni· field." Dr. Barker says his main In discussing tho financial aid second class Is offered on TTH verslty. Before he came to MH·B, objective is to help people learn. packages, Mr. Elliott said that all from 3:30 to 15:00 and the same op­Dr. Barker was employed at Me· One way to do· this, he pointed financial aid packages for students tiona for Friday are offered. Clendon C o m m u n it y Colle~te. out, was to open membership In for the next year would probably A special fee of 50.00 will help While In college, he participated the science club to anyone Intel'· be about the same as they were pay for boat lease, gas, skUs, life in many varied activities which ested, not juat science majors. for the 1072·73 school year. He re- jackets, etc. It wlll be a lot of fun ranged from being Chief Justice To conclude the Interview, Dr. minded students that they must and very odudatlonal too. See

Every dorm hu room check of the Supremo Court In SGA to· Barker simply stated, In Gorman submit a new need analysis. The Mra. Hlx or drop her a note at but It aeems that Burt Ia unique participating In Alpha Pal Ome~ta, of course, "That Ia enou~th for "ACT" Family Financial State· Box 367 by May 9 If yor are inter· in one thing. The Burt house a dramatic fraternity, He says today." menta for dependent atudents and eated In taklnl water skiing. council, believing that necessity that hla hobby Ia making· mlnla· ------------------------------------1& the mother of Invention, apenda turo furniture and he hopes to a 1reat deal of time maklnl up learn to play 1oU In tho near fu· witty alolana and al1n1 to an- ture. Hla profeaalonal activities In· nounco room check. Not only do elude memberahlp In tho Amorl· the&e attract attention, the very can Chemistry Society, of which thou1ht of roomcheck 11 brlahten· ho attended the 16Dth national ed, Maybe aomoono should Jpon· meetlnl In Dallal, April 11. aor a conteat between dorm• to He came to MH·B because of 1ee who could come up with the tho ~portunlty to ut1U10 hla moat orlllnal room chock notlcoa, training more ful1y by teaching Tho ro1ulta would bo-to aay the advanced choml•try at a four-year lea•t-lnteroatlnt. co11e1o. When aaked if he enjoyed

"Pretldent'• Club" Hold• Banquet

teachlnl at the college level, he made a abort comment about hllh lehool ohemlatry and aald "yea he wa1 very happy and he plan• to 1tay In the area and teach." ·

Slxty·flvo penon• who contrl· While ln co11e1e, Dr. Barker buted M'711,000 to Mary Hardin· minored In Gorman, which he Baylor College In 18'71

11 wore aomotlmea employ• In clan. Tho

honorod at a candloll&ht Proal· rea1on he 11y1 11 that "chomlatry dent'• Club" banquet Friday, May oan b~ boring,' Jf you tntenpaoe t, in MH·B'I Hardy HaJI, ,

Prolldent Bobby E. Parker pre· aided over the banquet at which lOA WILL MilT gu11t1 rocotvod apoclal app.,.cla· THURIDAY, MAY 10, Uon award•. Thil wa1 tho fourth .aT ' oo , aa IN H•RDY annual "Preatdont'l Club" affair, .__ .. __ , ______ .. __ _

Congressman W. R. Poage to Speak At Co1111ence11ent Exercises, May 19

Congreuman w. R. (Bob) Poage South Texas Children's Homo In In Hardy Hall following commence. will be the cQmmoncomont 1peak· Beeville, Toxaa, will receive an ment at 12:30 p.m. ar for Mary Hardin-Baylor College honorary Doctor of Divinity degree. Dr. Parker aaid "we are deeply at eeromonloa achedulod Saturday, Commencement actlvltiel begin llonorod that Congrosaman Poage May 19, according to Dr. Bobby E. Friday morning with the annual will address our commencement Parker, Mfi·D pre1ldent. 1prlng mooting of tho collOID board this year, for tow men in politics

A total of 183 de11reo1 will be of tru1teo1 In tho Mabee Student havo 10 well •oa·vod tho idoall In awarded. Commonoemont be1ln1 at Contor at 10:00 a.m. At 4:00 p.m. which wo must all continuo to be· 10:90 a.m. in the W. W. Walton a toa at tho proaldont'a home wlll llevo If wo lll'e to move forward Chapel, A bacoalauroato charge honor tho claiR of 1923 prior to togothor." will be delivered at 8 p.m. Friday, 1t1 Golden Annlvenary reunion Dr. Parker 1ald tho Reverend May 18, by tho Reverend Je110 dinner In Hady Jlall at 0:00 p.m. Lun1ford 11 rocolvlnll 1111 honorary Monroe Lunlford. Tho baoaalaur· Following tho baccalauroto Dr. degree "for hi• unique aorvlco to oato 11 1110 1chedulod ln Walton Parker will boat a reception honor· <lod In a very practical and all· Chapel. lng tho ·1onlor cla11 in Hardy Jtall. nlflcnnt way - he haa croatod a

Congre11man Poa111 wm rt• Thoro wlll be a Golden Annl· wonderful home for ohlldron at oolvo an honorary do1reo of Dootor veraary reunion broakta•t on Slit· Doovlllo, one that caro1 for aoo nf humanltlol and tho Reverend urday at 8:00 a.m. In Hardy Hall. )'O\In111tora with 1roat Jove and Lun1ford, admlni1trator of the A oollele hmoheon will be hold klndno11,

Page 3 THE BELLS May 7, 1973 Letter to Editor Give Credit Where Credit is Due Dear Editor:

By Ron Hendren The annual Easter Pageant at

Mary Hardin-Baylor College was held Friday, April 13, at 5:30

WASHINGTON-Struggles for p.m. And as it is every year, it change more often than not was a marvelous, moving exper­prove threatening to more peo- ience. pie than not. So it has been Last year students were told with civil rights movements, that there would be no pageant with end-the-war crusades, with because of lack of time and lack anti-poverty campaigns, and, at of student participation in prev­least until now, with the drive ious years. Students responded for women's equality. quickly that they were eager to

Indeed, women's equality is have a pageant, and following sev­a particularly good example of eral "negotiations" the administra· a cause which potentially threat- tive "OK" was given and work ens the vested interests of a was begun. vast number of people. And it With only about three weeks was not until the issue of equal to work in, students put on a salaries for the sexes came to fabulous pageant. And when the the fore that the movement gar- tears had dried, and the sun had nered widespread understand- set on the 1972 Easter Pageant, ing and sympathy. Everybody several people were heard to say, wants to be paid his or her "Well, they did it this year to worth, and few people ever prove they could. Next year will think they are. be different when they don't have

Student Government? Is there a student governing body on the MH-B campus?

YES, there is one, fellow students. And whether you are aware of it or not, your Student Government Association {SGA) is moving and working and growing in effectiveness. Elections were held in March for new executive officers. Class elections were held in April for Legislative Council members, and proposals and voting will take place in the next few SGA Legislative Council meetings for Judicial Council members. Executive officers for 1973 are: Helen Wilson, president; Donna Drew, vice president; Evelyn Fry, secretary, and Cindy Irvin, treasurer.

Legislative Council will be meeting regularly twice a month to discuss the Student Handbook, Judicial Council members for 1973, and P.lans and programs for next year. All students are invited to come to the meetings and express your wishes. SGA cannot be effective without you. Whatever SGA accomplishes will be because you as students either support or fail to support your student government.

We cannot function adequately without your help. You will be made aware of the agendas for future meetings, and the re­sults of past meetings. The potential to make SGA an effective tool of communication for student opinions and needs, and an effective self-governing body is all in your hands.

Helen Wilson, President, Student Government Association

------01-----

And The Winner Is • • • Even so, sympathy is not necessarily followed by active a rallying point." But let it be

support. The business of earning a living can be pretty cut-throat, known here that this was not the and words, even when entered on the statute bocks, don't nee- case. The students of Mary Har­essarily insure corrective action. lt:s what one woman leader call· din-Baylor proved to be more rna- Dr. Bobby E. Parker, Mary. Har- award, presented to a sociology ed "the vast gap between practice and policy" on the equal ture than those rather narrow din-Baylor Colege president, pre- major who demonstrates scholar-salary front. . opinions. students rallied around sented awards to more than 50 stu- ship, leadership and service.

One aspect of the money issue, however, is receiving both the idea of presenting the story dents at the annual MH-B awards Linda Insall of Bertram· received sympathetic attention and a surprising degree of prompt, correct- of Jesus Christ to an audience day April 26. the nursing award and Douglas ive action, and that is the question of sex bias in the lending of approximately 600. And they Scholarships went to Darla Her-· Hoppock of Temple received the world. did a fantastic job. rington of Belton, who earned the Lillian Shelton Harral speech

It is pretty well established that women have always had a May I offer my thanks to all Permilla Mitchell Cline Piano Scho- award. harder time than men in securing loans. Married women generally those students who worked so larship; Mrs. Paula Lohse of Kil- Laura Tips of Harker Heights are required to have their husbands co-sign notes. Single or di- hard to create such a high-quality leen and Mrs. Sarah Brown of Bel- received the Wall Street Journal vorced women often find it impossible to obtain loans or credit. production. And our thanks go to ton, who received Presser Music award given to outstanding majors

The brilliance of the credit issue from women's standpoint is those faculty members and admin- Scholarships; Donna Drew of Cop- in Business Administration. that lenders are the only people directly threatened by change. istrative members who lent a peras Cove, awarded the Belton Steve Neves of Belton received "It's a nice, clean issue," one feminist put it. helping hand. Branch of the American Associa- the Jewel Vickers Payne Memor-

That she is right is underscored by results on Capitol Hill Special thanks goes to Dr. Me- tion of University Women Scholar- ial medal for the best drawing by where so far this year no fewer than 15 bills have been intra- connell who opened her budget, ship; Janet Aurentz of Killeen and an art student, and Evelyn Fry of duced relating to the availability of consumer credit to women. and to Mr. Bruce Bowles who' Frances Atmar ·of Belton, who re- Friendswood and Dannie Hefner Scores more are pending in state legislatures and before city took care of programs and· much ceived Van English Scholarships. of Phillips received the Bluebon­councils. publicity. And on and on the Other awards included Stella P. net medal for work on the student

Some retailers and bankers have already seen the handwriting list could go. Those of you who Ross Memorial medals to Miss annual. on the wall and are moving voluntarily to change the score. And made the difference know who Drew as the outstanding Christian Rhonda Brock of Belton was why not - after all, the business community is painfully aware you are. girl; to Nancy Irvin of Austin, as awarded the Phi Beta Lambda that 53 per~e':lt of consumers ~re female. . . . . The 19'73 Easter Pageant was a daughter of a minister whose in- award and Ernest Williams re-

The valld1ty of the women s .charg~s about cred1t ava1lab1llty success - as it touched hundreds fluence most measures up to col- ceived the Accounting Excellence has been well d~u"'!en~ed. Stu~1es umformly. show that ~to~es, of loves for our Lord - thanks lege standards and ideas; and to award. ~anks, and other mst1tut1ons wh1ch grant cred1t or loans d1scnm- to those of you who gave time, Milena Vitkovic from Yugoslavia, Baylorian awards were given mate byf- . b 5 f . d money, and love. And I thank for making the most progress in with the All·Art award given to

-'? t7n coun.hng no!"e or at est 0 percent o a marne you . . . English. · · · · · Joan Kaiser of Killeen, the All-woman s mcome '" grantmg mo~tgage loans; Helen Wilson Cathy Whitby of Temple received Literature award to Bonnie Ernst • -refusing to count comm~mty p~operty as collateral, because, Assistant Director the Sigma Alpha Iota International of San Antonio, the Poetry award ~n. some states, the husband IS cons1dered the sole manager of 1973 Easter Pageant Fraternity Award, given to the to Helen Wilson of Killeen, and (Ointl~~=~a~df~;rtyp;roof of sterilization as assurance that the member with the highest grade the Prose award to Dean Evans of

· k average, Temple The Sigma Tau Delta award woman will contmue wor lng· · -disregarding alimony 'and child support payments as SGA Legislative The W. W. James Cup, recog. for the best short story was award·

income; Meet•ng nizing the outstanding sports wo. ed to Nancy Irvin of Austin. -automatically classifying divorced women as "credit risk" 1 man, was awarded to Deborah Nineteen seniors were awarded

because credit ratings established during marriage belong solely THURSDAY, MAY 10 Sims of Bryan. Who's Who in American College to the husband. Presented for leadership, scho· and Universities for 1972 and

The list goes on, and all In all it presents a pretty strong 6 p.m. - Hardy larship, citizenship and personality, 1973. Those receiving the award Indictment against the financial community, which either was un- Proposed Agenda: the J, W. Thomas Home Economics were Michael Beimer of Temple, prepared for the onslaught or had a pretty poor case to begin Judicial Council Selection award sent to Connie Long of Bel· Mary Bridges of Belton, Gerald with-possibly both. ton. Norma Gall Wolfe of Lam· Caldwell of Waco, Debbie Odom

Women's salaries, bankers have pointed out, are not as high SGA Budget - pasas received the Teacher Educa· Cox of Temple, Irene Ullo Edwards as men's, and that restricts their line of credit. Aside from being Proposed expenditures and tlon Committee award for the of Belton, Bonnie Ernst of San Irrelevant, that argument poses a kind of Pontius Pilate yes-things- money-making projects greatest contribution to the teacher Antonio, Victor Feazell of Belton, are-bad-but-look·lt's-not-my-foult stance. They go on to say that education program. Mary Ann Krupicka of Heidenhei· in many states legal limitations disfavoring women bind the lend· Kathi Foster of Quanah was mer, Connie Long of Belton, Kay er's hands, that there are laws which, for example, require the A. T T E N T 1 0 N f awarded the Sigma Alpha Iota McCarthy of Temple, Terry Pavog-husband's signature on Instruments of debt. That, too, Is a weak Deans Award for musicianship and gi of El Paso, Margot Rebovlch. of defense, for It Implies, quite correctly, that the laws themselves CLUB PICTURES WILL 81 scholarship; and the F. B. Russell Belton, Mary Rogers of Muldoon, are unfair-precisely the women's point. TAKIN ON THIS SCHIDUL• Journalism awards wont to news· Melba Smith of. Temple, Ann Speer

It Is not surprising, then, that the "Give-Credit-Where-Credit· THURSDAY, MAY 10 - TWO paper editors Carolyn Tice of El of Bolton, Frances Torrell of Is-Due" movement has received attention in ell parts of the country PICTUR .. WILL a• TAK•N. Paso and Susan Koller of Corpus Gatesville, and Jan Ward of Belton. and support from many segments of the populace. The Issue has (One of club membera end Christi. begun to get Its fair share of press coverage. And legislative ac:- one of officers.) The Vnlvern Moore Hampton tlon, both federal and state, Ia likely to peak later this year. With English award for the best writing A. TTENTION -

STUDENTS! It will come a major advance for women's equality, marking the lponaora - PleaH be preaent of the year was awarded Deborah movement once again as a political force to be reckon,ed with. for plctur••· K. cook, and the Freshman Science For sure, victory In the credit arena will provide women s equalt· u:oo-Alpha Mu Gamma. award tor the highest grade went The M•tY Hardln·laylor Art tista an Important paychologlct~l boost which haa been sorely mlsaed ll:OG-BSU to Linda Hammonds of Longview. Show will be on Wednesday to date. ll:lo-Baylorlan Staff Stokoly-Van Camp's Silver Trl· and Thurscl1y - May 9 and -------0------- ll:lG-Bella Staff vet award to an outstanding homo 10, 197~. Showllme will be

"No Society Is Perfect" 11:20-Bluobonnct Staff economics graduate went to Connie Wednesday - 9 a.m. to I 11:2G-Diakonoa Long or Belton. The business edu· p.m. and Thurscl1y - 1 p.m. 11:'3G-Freshman Cla88 Offlcora cation award for potential for be· to 4 p.m.

A long time ago when God created mt~n and man supposed· 11:3G-Young Rcpubllcana coming an outstanding teacher was The show will bt In the ly grew up to make his own decision& without any help from his 11:40-Junlor Class Officers presenter to Ann Spoor of Dol· Lillian Shelton Memorl1l Au• maker, liberties were Incorporated which I feel have been dis· U:4G-Lntln American Scholar, ton; and Susan Douglass or Kllloon dltorlum In the new student appreciated at this writing. ll:Do-Mu Eta Beta <APO> and Barbara Wohleb or Temple center.

No society Ia perfect. To expect It to be Ia somewhat short ll:D~Nuralng Students Aaao, t•eoelvcd the Sigma PI Ome~&n ., ___________ _, of optimism. Nevertheleaa, thla society In which we live ahould 12:0D-Phl Alpha Theta not be taken for nothing , , . which seems to be done. 12:0~Phl Epsilon Mu

1 addreu myself to Ron Hendren, Faith and belief In Ideals 12:1o-Pal Thota Homo Eco. and policies , , • what does that mean to you? 12:1~R. A.

1 believe In America, I aupport her lnatltutlona and believe 12:2o-Roynl Acadomla In her exlatence. Granted, I do not alwoya agree with the way 12:2~Sonlor Claaa Oftloora thlnga are handled but, then again, my mother always believed 12:36-SII(ma PI Omoan In apanklng. 12:81S-SIIIma Tau Dolta

And when God created you and me, he ;ave to ua lu~Curlea 12:46-Sophomoro Clall Oltl. which have bloaaomed Into fundamental "freedom•" auch aa 12:41S-Spanlsh Club freely expre11ed apeech and opinion. Even though dlaappreclated, 12:Do-&GA. It now playa 11 vital role In the American play, 12:D&-TS111A.

My queatlon to you, Mr. Hendren, Wlll It meant to be taken 1:oo-Tho Theatre for grllnted? And how much did you pay for Its uae? l:OD-Phl Bota Lambda

1:1o-Young Democrats Rea~ctfully, 1:1D-Solonoe Club Carolyn Tlce

Publlahed w11klv at Marv Hardln·Baylor College •• a part of the atudent activity, Return ~atage guarantHCI,

Entered It ttie Post OffiCI In Belton, TIKII, II IICOnd<llll maHer under the Act of March B, 1 873. Editor ----·---·----"---- SUIIn Kellar A11latant Edltora Shalla Richardton, Vonle Hopkin• Buatneas Mln•atr Janice Andrew• Reporter ---·----·- Mike Wllllamt

.. ·I

Bonnie Ernst's Poem Published

May 7, 1973 THE BELLS

Songs, Dances of Other Lands Performed by MH-B Students

Page 3

Bonnie Ernst, the recipient of the "Best All-Around Literature

· Award" from the Baylorian Maga. zine, has received notification con­

. cerning the publishing of one of

. her poems. "Summer Miles" has ; been selected by the Board of ' Judges to be published in the An-

Students from Mary Hardin-Bay­lor recently performed in Gates­ville for Delta Kappa Gamma (a teachers' organization), and two local sororities. Mrs. Sue Hix was in charge of the program titled "Look, Listen, and Identify." Stu­dents from the International Club and from rhythms class performed dances and sang songs from var­ious countries around the world. Native costumes were \Vorn, and a brief history was given about the development or reasons for dancing and singing in each coun­try.

Tear", were Josefa Diaz, Gilda Chavez, Olga Salazar and Pedro Trevino. A Spanish dance "El Jarabe Tapatico" was danced by Elizabeth Morales and Mrs. Hix. Kiyomi Satake danced a Japanese dance called "Michael." The hit of the show were the Persian Folk dancers who performed three of their native dances. The dancers were Hassan Saferazaden, Reza Mecanick, Saeed Moayadzadek, Adran Goktapek, and a friend from TJC, Fred Nasery. The last dance was a prediction of dance in the future from "2001 Space Odyssey" performed by Smirk Sims, Jackie Jones, Sherry Smery, and Mrs. Hix.

NANCY IRVIN Historical Phila

DONNA DREW Royal Academia

nual Anthology of College Poetry from the National Poetry Press. The Anthology is a compilation of the finest poetry written by the college men and women of Amer­ica, representing every state in the country. Selections were made from many thousands of entries submitted.

Historical Phila Names OHicers

Royal Academia Elects Officers

Officers for Historical Phila Royal Academia announces the Society were recently elected and officers for the 1973-1974 academic will serve for the 1973-74 year.

Serving as president will be Nancy Irvin. Miss Irvin is a jun­ior social science major from Austin. She is an officer and ac­tive member of the Science Club and treasurer of the 1973-74 sen­ior class. She is also serving as Chief Justice of Judicial and is a member of Phi Alpha Theta fraternity.

First vice president is Carolyn Tice of El Paso, a junior speech and drama major. Dorothy Dunn, junior elementary education maj­or from Richardson, will serve as second vice president.

year. Serving as President for the new

year is 1\Iiss Donna Drew, a sen­ior history major from Copperas Cove. Donna is presently serving as SGA Vice-President, Alpha Chi president, BSU Evangelism Chair­man, BSU State Council member, Alpha Mu Gamma National Council member, and is a member of Phi Alpha Theta. Other honors include the Stella P. Ross Memorial Award and the AAUW scholarship.

Serving as Vice-President is Miss Joy Edwards, a sophmore sociology major from Belton. She is current­ly an officer in the Human Rela­tions Club. Recording secretary is Kathi

Foster of Quanah, music education Pam Kien, a senior nursing rna­major. Cheryl Moore, sophomore nursing major from Texas City, is jor from Carthage, will be serving corresponding secretary, and as secreatary. Gloria Mattson, soph­alumni secretary is Sherry Balan- omore nursing major from Nolan­ger of Boston, Mass., a sopho- ville, will serve as treasurer and more nursing major. Debbie Thomas, sophomore nursing

Elected as treasurer was Sandy major from Corsicana will serve Strength, a sophomore nursing as Sergeant-at-Arms, Parliamentar­major from Ft. Worth. Sergeant- ian, and Keeper ~f the Archives. at-arms are Betty Reddell, junior Graduating semors include Grace physical education major from Hoy, Joan Sanders, Ann Crimmins, Morgan's Point and Gayle Lind- Edie Cornett, Donna Byerly, Ruth ner, sophomore physical education Canava, Lela Butler, and Jamie major from Houston. M e r 1 e Casarez. Lucko, junior biology majbr from Sponsors of Royal Academia So-Yoakum, is room sergeant. ciety are Dr. Beatrice Huston and

Sherry Jackson, junior elemen· Mr. Gerald Dingus. tary education major from Salado, Past president of Royal Acade· is keeper of the archives. Music mia is Miss Grace Hoy. co-chairmen are Sarah Goodwyn of Waco, sophomore nursing maj­or and Donna Stapp of Florence, elementary education major. Re· porter is Janice Andrews of San Antonio, a sophomore elementary education major.

The sponsors of Historical Phlla Society are Mrs. Sue Hix, Joyce Barnes, and Dr. Sam Nich· olson.

---<0>----

Alpha Mu Gamma Elects New Officers

Alpha Mu Gamma, national for­eign language honor society, re· cently selected officers for the 1973·74 academic year. These new­ly elected officers are as follows: Christine Malone, president: Eve· lyn Fry, vice-president: Minnie Abrego, secretary; and Carolyn Hall, treasurer.

Faculty sponsors include Gerald Dingus, Minnie Hendorson, and Kenneth Young.

A senior sociology and home economics major from San Anton­io, Bonnie will graduate from Mary Hardin-Baylor this month. Several of .her poems have been published by such magazines as Palmer Pub-lishers, Bell County Monthly, and various issues of the Baylorian. Others have won awards in con­tests sponsored by the Temple Fed­eration of Women and the Texas Poetry Society. Currently, Bonnie is senior class president, co-editor of the Baylorian, a member of Sig­ma Tau Delta and the Poetry So­ciety. She has also served as pres­ident of Historical Phila and has been active in many other as­pects of campus activities.

Performing a contemporary dance from America to the record "Shaft" were Sherry Emery and Smirk Sims. Hui-Ming Chang and George Huang sang a Chinese song, accompanied by Anne Huang. Mi­lena Vitkovic and Mrs. Hix perfor­med a dance from Yugoslavia. Rosena Deveaux sang the nation­al theme song from the Bahamas, "Exodus." Performing the Israeli dance, "Mayim, Mayim" were Jac­kie Jones, Elaine Lee, Smirk Sims, Sherry Emery and Mrs. Hix. A Russian folk dance was done by Milena Vitkovic and Maggie Lee. Singing the Spanish song, "The

The audience thoroughly enjoyed looking at foreign costumes, look­ing at foreign dances, listening to music from other countries and identifying the cultures represen­ted. The performers were treated with a wholesome American meal of fried chicken, potato salad, bak­ed beans, cakes, pies, tea and punch. The meal was prepared by members of Delta Kappa Gamma. . Mrs. Elaine Riley, sponsor of the International Club, made many of the dance costumes herself, and helped coordinate the program.

Dorm Elects Council Burt Dormitory has announced

its House Council for the 1973-74 year. .

Carolyn Tice as dorm chairman will preside over the new House Council. A speech and drama ma­jor from El Paso, Carolyn is also

Gerald D. ·Dingus, Donna Drew Named to National Office

A faculty member and a stu-dent from Mary Hardin-Baylor

first vice-president of Historical College were named today (April Phila Society, a member of Alpha 26) to national offices in the pro­Psi Omega fraternity, and vice- fessional foreign languages so­president of the 1973-74 senior ciety, Alpha Mu Gamma, meeting class. here in national convention.

versity, MH-B, and is currently in­volved in work toward a doctorate degree at the University of Texas.

Head Proctor is Janice Andrews, sophomore elementary education Gerald D. Dingus, MH-B asso­major of San Antonio. She is vice- ciate professor of languages, was president of the 1973-74 junior elected vice president of the so­class and member of Historical ciety for the region represented Phila Society. by Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana,

Diana Roberson, freshman nurs- New Mexico, and Oklahoma. His ln~t major from Sea~traves, is In· term runs to the spring of 1975.

Miss Drew has been on the dean's list each semester at MH-B, and recently one of her .history papers won a prize in the E. C. Barksdale Student Lectures con· test at the University of Texas at Arlington.

Mary Hardin-Baylor College lao. guage instruction employs modern tape and record methods. MH-B of· fers eight courses in French and 11 courses in Spanish.

t ra-Dorm Representative. Diana is Miss Donna Drew, a MH-B jun-j hi j f RESEARCH MATERIALS

reporter for the 1973-74 sophomore or story rna or rom Copperas C I d i ALL TOPICS class and a member of the nurs- ove, was e ecte a nat onal stu· d t t ti f th I Write or call for your up-to-in" club. en represen a ve o e an·

,. i t H t 1 date mall order catalog of thou-A sophomore nursing major guage soc e y, er erms a so runs t th i f 1975 sands of outstanding research from Phoenix, Arizona, Kathey Co- o e sp1 ng o . papers. Enclose $1.00 for pol-

thorn, is sechetary, Sophomore Dingus holds a Dlpome De Gran- t•ge •nd h•ndllng, Cheryl Moore, Texas City nursing cais earned at the University of We Also Do major, Is social chairman. Fh·e Hennes in France and a master's Cuatom-M•de R ... •rch Marshal Is Sylvia Duekens of Tern· degree from East Texas State Uni· COLLEGIATE RISIARCH ple, a sophomore nursing major. varsity, He joined the MH-B fac- 1429 Wuwlck Avenue (Suite 1) Vicki Cates, freshman elementary ulty in 1966 and has completed Werwlck, Rhode lalend 02881 education major of Grand Prairie other graduate work at Abilene (401) 463·9150 and Bccklo Hughes, freshman Christian College, Colorado State We Need A Local Agent n_u_rs_i_n_ll_m_nj_o_r_o_f_L_o_t_t._ar_e_t_ow_n University, Texas Christian Uni· ~~='~~~~~~~~~~

Cindy Wong was also recently Initiated Into tho society for out· standing achievement In the study of French.

Compliments of

BR·ITT DRUG CO. 112 E. Central Phone 939-2682

LAN4'UAGI LIADII - Gtr1ld D. Dlnauc, 11101l1tt 11yler Coii1Jt, employ• modern t1pe lnctructlon In MHol'• tlictld April 26 to thl · polt of riiiOnll VIII prtlldtnt of Mtntlrey, C1llf. An MH•I lunler, Ml11 Donn• Drew of Copper11 tlonel 1tudtnt rtprt11nt1tlve.

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Page 4 THE BELLS May 7, 1973

Donna Drew Merits Acclaim For the second consecutive year

a Mary Hardin-Baylor history stu­dent has been awarded an under­graduate paper prize at the an­nual E. C. Barksdale Student Lec­tures contest at the University of Texas at Arlington.

Donna Drew of Copperas Cove, a senior history major, has been named one of three undergrad­uate winners in competition open to students from over 450 cam­pus chapters of Phi Alpha Theta international honor society in his­tory.

Miss Drew read her paper "The Fundamentalist Crusade of the 1920's: A Study in Interpretation" at the Barksdale Lectures at UTA. The essay later will be P,Ublish-

TSEA Holds Last Meeting

cd in the Barksdale History Jour­nal.

Last year Gene Pruitt was a­warded top prize of $100 for his "Abrogation of the Two-Thirds Rule, 1936." His paper appeared in the 1973 edition of the J oumal.

Originally written for a course in southern history, Miss Drew's paper examines historians' inter­pretations of the fundamentalist crusade of the 1920's.

Speak Up By Bobby Johnson

They say don't witness to the people you see.

Don't talk about Jesus who died at Calvary.

People call you "Fanatic" and "Righteous Holy Joe."

No education, friend, what do you know?

I still love you, neighbor, what-ever you may say.

TSEA held its last meeting ·of Simple trust and faith in Christ this school year, Thursday, April. is still the way. 12. 1\frs. Jean Sykes, who teaches Not by works lest any man should

THE LEADING CHARACTERS of "Blithe Sprirt'' were (1. to r.) Doug HopP;QCk as Charles, Carolyn Tice as Ruth, and Eve Hoppock as Elvira.

6th grade in the Temple Public boast. School System, was guest speaker. He changes people's lives from She was introduced by Bonnie coast to coast. Bone, program chairman. Her topic was, "Values Clarification Being a Christian is not an easy

'Blithe Spirit' Is Presented The· Baylorian will not be

in until Friday, May 11. in the Classroom". Rather than task. Noel Coward's three-act play, talking to the group, Mrs. Sykes You really start to live when you "Blithe Spirit," was staged Friday demonstrated the different techni- take off your mask. and Saturday night, May 4-5, by

ques and strategy of value clari- Come on, Christian, stand firm Mary Hardin-Baylor College stu- -==~=i:~===~======z===::==~~~~ fication, by actively involving the and strong. 'dents in the new Lillian Shelton ~ · · - · ·- --- -- ·- -· ·--- - - -- - --whole group. Not only did every- Telling people about Jesus has Theatre in the Mabee Student Cen­one take a good look at them- never been wrong. ter. The play was directed by selves and their values, but also You may be scorned and put to Charles G. Taylor of Temple. a good deal of fun was had by the test. The theatre is designed to seat ail. Sorry that some of you missed But Christ died for you so give 400 persons and MH-B officials in­it. Him your best. ' vited Central Texans to join stu-

During the brief business meet- It's not through money, fortune, dents at these performances . ing, conducted by Vanny Bolsins, or fame. Curtain time was 8 p.m. and ad· plans for a social tea in honor of It's through God's son Jesus mission was $1.00 for adults and TSEA. members who graduate in Christ is his name. ' 50 cents for young people. May, was discussed. Sherry Em- Cast members for "Blithe Spir-ery and Rilla Eproson were ap- So repent of your sin and selfish it" included Laura A.dair of Ft. pointed as co-chaimen for the pride. Worth, Carolyn Tice of El Paso, tea. The old rugged cross is where Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Hoppock of

This is the last report from you can abide. Temple Cindi Vernon of Ft. Worth, TSEA this semester. We have My Jesus is real and true to the Jerry Bevers of Temple and Ra· some exciting things planned for end. mona Harris of Ft. Sto~kton. the new year, beginning in Sep. And without a doubt He's your Production staff includes Eu· tember. Hope all you Education dearest frined. gene Sayler, Mr. Hoppock, Miss majors will rally and help make Tice, Miss Adair, Sara Sprecher the 1973-74 school year one of It is colder at the South than and Sue Beck TSEA's best! at the North Pole. "Blithe Spi~it" is set in London

SEE YOU THEN! . Aggressive, part-time and poa.

American Desk Mlnufacturlnt Company, Temple, Texas, has

albly full·tlme salesman to several positions open for work evenings. Good comml .. summer employment. Rate of slon and bonuna. Must be 21 pay Is $1.60 per hour to $200 with car. Prefer married. Call per hour. Jl lntorostod aH Of. 773-4552, 9 a.m.--6 p.m. for ape flee of tho Dean of Students polntmont.

for details.

Fl NAL EXAM SCHEDULE SPRING SEMESTER - 1973

A three hour time period haa been aet for all exama. Since all claaaea do not meet for the same period of time, only beginning tlmea are used. If a atudent mlaaea 11n exam due to lllneaa, an excuae must be aecured from the VIce Prealdent for Academic Affair& before a make-up exam will be given. $10.00 fee will be charged for make-up exama. Exama are to given at the time acheduled.

MONDAY TUIIDAY WIDNIIDAY THUIIDAY 1·14·73 1·11·73 1·16-73 1·17·73

Exam 8130 a.m. 8130a.m. 8130a.m. 8130 a.m. Time to to to to

11130 a.m. 11130 a.m. 11130 a.m. 11130 a.m.

Regular Claaa time 8100 TTh 9130 TTh 1100 TTh 12100 MWF

Exam ·1130 p.m. 1130 p.m. 1130 p.m. 1130p.m. Time to to to to

4130 p.m. 4130p.m. 4130p.m. 4130p.m.

Regular Claaa time B100MWF 9100MWF 10100 MWF 11100 MWF

Exam 6100 p.m. 6100 p.m. 6100 p.m. 6100p.m. Time to to to to

9100p.m. 91oop.m. 9100p.m. 9&00p.m.

Regular Cl1111 time 1&00MWP 2100MWF 2&30 TTh 2&30 TTh

Night cla1111 will give Flnel Examination• 1t the regulerr, acheduled mtttlng time, bltllnnlnl the WHk If Mey 7, 1t7 ,

The 1chedule Ia dealgned to 111l1t tht 1tudtnt1 In pltn·' nlng their noon end evening meal1, end to prevent en ex· ce11lve number of exam• In one day.

Day 1tudent1 ere welcome to eat In the Dining Hell In Hardy, and may purcha1t mtel tlckttl et the Dining Hall.

and revolves around the efforts of a middle•aged novelist to gather material through the use of a medium. The action is b1tilt through a seance which brings a couple of funny but "blithe" spir· its into the second wives. Noel Coward takes pity on the author, and calls off the wives, leavinB the author In considerably better "spirits."

Spanith Club Newt Tho Spanish Club mot Tuesday

tho first of May, 1873 and chose officers for the comlnK Fall some•· ter.

Tho offlcera are aa follows: Pre•· ldont·Luclo Botero; VIce Proal· dent·Lupe Rodrlpe1; Secretary Treasuror.Chrl1ty Milone; Repor· tor-Ann Pruitt, Social Chairman· Elodla McGuire.

Meot1n11 will be durlnl tho lunch hour of the flrat and third Tuesday of each month. We are plannlnl prolt'ama that will be of lntcreat to the Spanllh atudent.

Due• are •1.00 per Seme1ter. If you are a Spanlah major or

mlnor or have an emphula ln Spanlah we hope to see you next fall.

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Glorieta Student Week Date:

Place:

August 14-21, 1973

Glorieta, New Mexico

Theme: "One Lord, Many Witnesses"

Conference Leaders: John Claypool - Pastor, Broadway Baptist Church,

Ft. Worth John Westbrook - Consultant to National Student

Ministeries John Bisagno - Pastor, First Baptist Church, Houston Dan McBride - Christian entertainer Thee Patraik - Director of Student- Work,

Baptist World Alliance _ Gerald Ray

Reservations: A reservation can be made by paying $7.50 and registering at the BSU office. Reservation deadline Is May 10. We cannot guarantee space after that date, so register as soon as possible. If your plans change, you may receive a full refund of the $7.50 up until July 1 0 . The total cost of transportation, meals, and lodging for that week will be approximately $36-$40. Insurance will be provided for every student.

Itinerary:· Depart from Belton on August 14 and return to Belton on August 21.

What can you do with a Jl year old

girl who hates I ' spinach?

Take her to thePdrtr

The world's best pizza. • ICI COLD DRINKI

. •' e COZY DIN ATMOIPHIRI e TAILI IIRVICI

Temple 1110 '"""''" Line 711·1111

11171 "lilA HUT INC,

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the a student publicl;ltion of Inary hardin-baylor

~ ·-friday, sept. 28,1973

. Day >Student . Registration JriCreases · This Year

by ~DIANE PARKER · Enrollment at Mary Hardin- Although it is too late to add Baylor ()Olliige for the fall seme- any courses, there are · several

-• St.er. is ·. 880 . compared to last . basic steps to follow when drop-. year's t!»taf of 816. . ping a course.

. Although only a small part of First, students must receive the enrollment at. Mary Hardin- perJ11ission from ·your advisor

_'. Barlor is · made· up of dorm before dropping a clas. Second, students, all of the· dorins, are students must go by the Regi­occupied by more residents·tbail'' Strar~s Office to officially with­

: usual. Johns'on. Dorm· is full . tO draw ·from a class. . capacity and Burt;-Striblffig, and 'l'be last dayto drop a course

. Gettys .Dorms :&re almost. filled. and -re~_eive only a withdrawal -· (t'W:l on a transcript is Oct. 1,

· ' The semester began officially · ·· 197~. Nov. 30 is· the last d_ay to ... as registration started at 8 a.m. dr?p a course ~nd ~~cei~,e a · . on Aug. 31;"-:1973 .in Townsend Wi~h?rawal Passi~~ ( '!p ) ?r · · "Librarj'~Mouday will be the last a Withdrawal Faihng ( WF').

. day to drop a'eourse and rtM:eive After ~ov. 3~ all ~?r~es drop- ·

Parties·~:::·)ltud _; .. SIIIIslline~ : .·. · .. : .... ···.'\:-{,:::,::~( '':·•·;;~<·~·:.! .. ~- ":"' ........ ' '.'/~; :,:· ~-· ·'··· .. : ... --.. :.: ..

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........... ~ .... ·the :freahmen '··day. ·. their · beanlea, . . ·

had clearly em· · . Friday · ctawned ·bright and meetl11itr tO . namel, and that sunny, and the ·flab met even

,_..11h·n ~·,in l•arn aome·of'. nlsht a- picnic wa• held to more aophomorea;. Many fi1h the aonpand·ame ·Rain· welcome .everyone back to were hearcl·to exclaim that ln. bow aonp~ · ·. · . achool, The only. damper on the two more daya It would be all . Becau" rraduatlon will be ~n . plcn~c Wll. that It waa· lnalde· over. Little did they IUiptCt an even ·· jear, ·the ,.Bunahlne".- becluH of bad ·Weather. what wu to come.· .

· elau would Initiate .tlte, "Rain· , .. The next day, even thourh It bow'~;•u, .,hlch wUI ll'aduate .wu . rala.lnr, .. IJtltiatlon · . bepn · &turday waa an eciually beau·

a "witbdre~ ·'passing." · ped Will receive an F .

·Inflation And Tile· MH-8 S by JANET SCOTT

Students at Maey ~~n~Bay-~· lor spend. rrom. ·~.00

per · .atudents to

tlon Grant Program. Unfortu­nately, for the students· not receivin a~y · · · . usis-

~:.:'

account• ' ' the' Jarg-1• It eat· part. of financial expendl·

.. . . . . ... ' tures. the second largest in -· ·There ·are~ five federal pro-.. meals. Two · hundred and sixty grams for atudent aid, More than students have food services and 50 per cent of ·the. atudenta 65 per cent·olthese are fed on a

. attending MH·BC receive 10me weekly average, The cost of a financial ald. The five program• meal for a studen~ is 74 cents and are the National Dire~ Student the college add• 26 centa per Loan, Collef{e Work $tudy, Edu· meal to thla. · eat,onal Opportunity Grant, Nur· Food costa about 48 cents per alng Student Loan, and Nuralng meal. The re1t goea to pay the Student Scholarahlp. . aalary of the eight full·tlme and

They were the 10urce of about the •lxteen atudent. employee• SSOO,OOO In aid laat year. who work .In the dining hall.

, ;'' ln·.an!'lclcl"iear,, : ·' · . · ; . with ·aophomorea meetlnr .fr•h· tllul day' with niany aurprW.• In · .. :~i • .;.:, .. •'· hvlral of~the·mile aiuclentl · .. ,men wherever they turned, Of atore for the flats. \Slime line · ~.;.· :. partleiP.tecl. ·in .. thia · Initiation .'courie,·:the frelhmen were al· ellmaxecl "InitiatiOn .. and after·

· :•t , ! "hkih .. madelt unlq .. e·ln'.enJ .. 'lowed to I,OtoOlaiHit a~d·.mall)' warda, a alp ~f.fellif W. U.heard · ·wa)'t•'·MR·Billu •n· ~for. of. the~·1VIIhtd the)' had mon · u fruhmenaftlupper elaumen

Thla year, . atudenta attendlnr Reaidenee halla, coat from 1180 colltae foJ t~e .flrattlme aa full· to 1170 per aemeater. Thla Ia time atucletfttt were ellalble for. uaed to pay utllltlea and ularlea. the. Baale-.Eclueatlonal Op~rtu· While theae flrurea may aeem nlty Grlnti •. Thla yur MH·BO . high, the atudent_lareally pttlnr alao reeelved ITO,OOO from the a barpln. If you don't. believe It, Texaa Tultlolt Gra~t llquallu· juat walt until ll'aduatlon.

·: .' · · abOut th.:J.,a, but thll'll. the. , elaiHI \Ct .10 .tO. · · all. joined hlnda · to aln1 . the · : . ftrat tl~e that men have.ttken an::: , . · 'ftaat. nlpt there wu a junlo,. aollep aonp. ~· ::,·:

ne~h w. Johnaon from Temple. Johnaon attended Lamar Unl·

· veral~y, Texaa Tech, and re· . celved hla doctorate from Texaa

AIIM Unlveraltf. Juanita Jewe Bawyera Jonea

of Temple will aerve aa an aaaoc!late profeaaor of Library Science, She received a muter'• of arta from Sam Houaton State Unlveraltf, and a maattr of library aalenae .. depet from North Texl• State Unlveralty.

At Mar)' Hardln•Baylor belln• Ita laet11 year, It now haa a faculty or whlah 41 . per aent have earned clctatorawa.

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Editorial

Year Of Introspective Uillrial·

The Right Way? . SIIHRt Life .

Ca•n~il· ElectiaiS Frightened freshmen, scream- ed than the screaming, red-faeed It is difficult to realize that . school and are. enthusiastic for

ing sophomores, juniors always sophomore yelling. "You're Two positions were filled in M&ry Hardin-Baylor College has her, individuals whohave great-close behind, and the ever~ 'pres- retarded, Fish!" - the 19'13 Student Life eleetion already started her third year .. er coneern and in DO measUre are ent disdainful senior-what does Initiation SHOULD be a last· Sept. 18-19 in ·Mabee· Student a.eoeducational institution. Time they. or would they be c:onsidered it all mean? Tradition, initiation,. ing memory. It should be a happy . Center.. Elected were Danny has Down by but these have been in a state of apathy iJl regards to ~ftese words begin to define .it. .. memory,however.- and ·a ~n- Hetner, ·a Belton senior,· Diane . exciting times as programs have their college. They .. are interested

. Originally c:Oneeived as · a struetive effort •.. Why 'not have Parker, a Rio Hondo sophomore, been organized as well as aetivi- and they are taking a real grasp method of unifying the freshman · freshmen do things wi~h a last· and a ·run-off between Margie ties that are aeeeptable to an· our upon real issues and_ are pOsitive class, initiation has strong roots ing, positive value? They eould Hennesey and Margie Miehaels. students . both. male and female. in their. relationship to Mary in MH-B's history. However, as weed flower beds, refinish The run-off election was Wed- We are. appreeiative ·of the Hardin-Baylor College. with any tradition, there comes a Stribling's "antique" furniture, . nesday in Mabee Student Center. response of so ~ny in this eoed- iligh is our goal for a greater time for transition. dean upperclassmen's rooms, Margie Hennesey of San AntOnio ucational· movement and~ we: do Mary Hardin, Baylor College, and

pick up trash on cam.,....- bind the was :named the third Student acknowledge the very ·positive · ·we mQSi be equipped to' aerie to This time seems to have arriv- student handbook~ or any one of Life ~presentative fot: the 1973- influence ·being ex~· by· the best interest ·our st1ldent ····

ed for initiation at MH-B. There a hundred projects which imply a h · 1 · · .everyone upon tb_is ca~pua. .. body. Not only do we have persists a feeling that the bonds sense of working together. A .· 74

se 00 year.. · We recognize the> in~· in- • activitieS in our academie ·pro-

of friendship are best cemented common interest and projeet iS Student Life.~ is a decision-_. the number of area. students ,..ho grimis. but. even ::..~ur. admini· in circumstances which fall just perhaps the best unifier of all. making commit~ made up of : are eleCtin~ to_: atte:Dd · .Mary : sirative • orga.Diz&tiolis. &re-'de,. . short of being harrowing. One. ·· ~aditions are. vital: to _the faculty. and studentstoprovid~a ·-Hardin~~ylor CoU.;:~js is~~- .aigned.to serVe the-n~ ofthe. begins to wonder if there inight "life-,style at·Mary.-.~dm-Baylor ... campus ·communicatJon syst~m . oompliment,to.:our exiStmjf~~~-~ •.•. entireoollegefaDWJ:oliiiheueas· not be a better way. College. As a pz:ogressive school,. betw~n the_ f~cul~y and stud~~ts · dent _·_~y; -fac11liy. ad~:.;·. (,f iulminisiratiVe service. ~.liege

A smiling face, a kind gesture, h'!"':e4er, · there ·: •. should ~.'a . on controversial ISSues.·· · .tion and to.- all .who-work-~,re. ··we;.and.tlie~ntedc,r.·cou~Ung

~h=~~e~:~i:n~r!,h.:~~:;. =~n;::_!;»h::':P!,:!:.s•tion. "t . • ~:-;!'!~e=~~~==::~~~ltt~(·;~:::=~~~-~';,. . ·~ · . --· ~- ,,;· . • attend.iiig~ beea\IS!t ·: of)he';'I'IO' · tbcMiBhtt.:~i~e·~~ei.appear.'

So-. h . N . m· - t·o·p Ten· .F1.5-h· graphical loeation_;c;f the""cioUep ~ to be-'h~ieal;~~,e are:gen-p S a e . - . . . . and because this -is the oDI)i p]aie:. uibeli;8meere ·~h'n ~· uy. our. . . . . . •· I • in which they are able to.reeeive'~ siudentS~Ui lidlller'·one~ . . •

The Top Ten Fish~ ten fresh- closer friends with her big sister ciUS .toPther to unite against a ~=C:~eszs :ancl':j·----·)lh'e .. i~i~·--~oOl 1~. !& men chosen each year for the and sophomores. the sophomores. mam ~ Y• owev:-- . - ".TTieY~oflnti'oapeetion."ThiS best attitudes in . their parti- Fish No 7 is Laura Pearson an -~Ish No. 3 c:omes all the way have had more than one l!tu ~t isthe yea• for detailecheU study cipation in freshmen initiation, elementa~y education ma'jor from Ankara, Turkey. Kria John· · say·to. me ~ P~~=-~ · _,_inwl~ _all·wbo,won and ·study have been chosen by the sopho- from Belton, who though that the son plans to study nursing, and .. toCollbe ~~ ~ , ..... ,_.,J t!.., ·:in this pl&ee.:Colleetl~elf we wlll more Kangaroo Court. · freshman class got closer toge- said she thought that it helped ege . r v,... · •- ···iden\IJy the .t)linp -~bat are as

Fish No. 10 is Kim Frazier, a ther through initiation. · her to get to know just about another. mstitution .an~ ~'!"'eel they sboJl}d . .be and·be ~nsative· · social work major from Lewia- -Fish No. 6 Ia a nursing major everyone. home and are atteriding .tb~·-· · to ~~·-~~·or thb,a ~nep in the

. i . iatlo from Arthur, Pe......, Entri· . . . college. Also, _I bave ._hid othera; yean to co~•· . , -, .. . . ~:~~~~h::~::;~= t!': lot:, kin, who loved su..;':"une. She Fish No.2 is Jan Evau from . ~l students, w)lo are .apPN.- . We .,a,re·:c~aJienpcl to .. thank people and eapeeially 'liked the feelsclosertoeve,yonenowtban AbUene, who plana to major in 1 ~ ::~~·~-::.~~.:::-:~=- -~~,~-~01' ~l,le~·we are, t~e friendship afterward. ever before. . physi~ education. ~he though are 10 ti the edueatioD the :-~ ~bi~.P that He ~u ~!~diid . · ··

Flab No.9 ia a nuning major Flab No. 61a a.~un~l major,_ l~lt!AtiO~. bel~ ·freah~e~. pt .. ~In-~- a,':", .. , ,,.\·~··~~!:_fO't. ~:!· . .,.,:~~~-~y:._fot ~ :· . ~>om A....,, Terri Wollb. -· llhoronJAwloot~Sho- ~- .. , •. .· .• ·· ·. ····.w~··ollo·lloil<iiio"'!~~.\!;l~~-·.~·~ · · dlallked the attitude• of aom_• _ felttbat.inltiat~lt~I~\Ounlfy . i.N··~~·;(l··.~·.s~ _..,_,,,.;,~llu-tiir:·'CtJ'f·~~·iiiiJenu.~:l.~iP.JP!i!t•. ~ -~-~fJtt'·· ... nah but.·lovea tradition. · · the elaues. · ·, · ... , :rrom Eaat·~,.Tex •. S~;:.'·;,.illcl'-'ari·:Jr."' ·;;;biciaa'r'Ofl.'owi~k!~~·-.~·. ii~~-~~m~'-' ...

Flab No.Bia aiiO from Austin, Flah"No. 411 Debbie B~P-Pra-· 'In .~na~ln _php~l. t!dUcla~. · .,w_ ..... i· ~-,;,;_.•;._Uiil&,. ;:·~--~~M~qt1f,~~"'·:;:t.c~::.~ . .- .'·':-,_ Sherrl Ham ton aapeelaleduea· apecial education major·· fiOm_ · tlon.- Slie uld when people are . ·~••.-. . . · ·. -'~vl· ,. ·- :' ... ;:;··"'!!i "·-t~a.a:.~l·r~w·,··:~-.~, ·• '.~,".~ ·, t.lon major.'sh~ Uked.lnitiat.lon· Florence. She felt the lnit.la~n .-natt.helf:~on~-theycanonly !: a:,;~\~:O:~~t~ . .;.!l~-::; ::;:~~.!~~~-~li::.~-,;\;,;h:;;:~;·,:.,;~:f!;-~~i;,.: .: · .. , · beeauae ahe waa able to become helped t.o bring t.be freah~n .Improve.. . a :'oup o_f people who lcWi · tli~ ,. ·: fi_-:~llu7~~~~~~r..~:-~ .: "

MEMBERS ARE still bein1 accepted Into the new band program at Mary Hardln·Baylor Collep. ·

lnt.ereated mualciana ahould contact Mr • .Jim Miller, · MH·B band director, In 205 PreaHr or telephone

Kall'dQsCope· extenalon '78. $anion with a 8.0 .,ade point averap wW not have

Meet.lnp are Tueaclaya and Thuraday at 1 p.m. In room cheek while junion mullt. obtain a poJnt averap 201 PreaHr, · .. , · ·. ·. of 8,2 and aopholriona a ~.1. Other prlvlleiH lnelude

"INTRODUOTION TO, ART" will be prnented ~· · . not belnl able to proctor and blln1 able to alp out. · 5 In Townaend Auditorium. '\ . :'whinever dealrtd, , · .... ·

The program, a aerlea of allele and ftlm propam1 · .Jean• aild tee-ahiN., allowed tverywheN exoept dealing with art., Ia aponaorecl-br the Oollep Dlvlalola olflee tmploJMI' wllo art reqHittd to eoaapiJ ww.. and An Depanment of Marr ·Hardln·ll)'lor Collep. Dr. :aobtiJ Parker'• . ...eommendatlona .about olllee and lalhown four tim••· The flnt ahowln1 blpn1 at t · · · apparel,: ·ratlp ahlrtl for femaltl wW not bl a.m. and Ia followed by another ahowlnl at U! a.m. · aceeptablt. · · · . ' · Afternoon aeulona bepn at. 1 p.m. ancl 8 p.m. · 8TUDIDNT8 UOIDIVING AID from the Student

·THE MARY HARDIN·BAYLOR Oollep Nul'llin1 JCcluea\lonll. Opportunlt.J Grant aad _,ht· Nunlat Student.t ·Auoelatlon will meet Oft. 1 at 4 p.m. at 8tudenta;Loan or the Nuralg 8tudtnt.lleholarHip Alexander Dorm. . · · ·· ; ,...., ..:...,..., ·. -~. .. up t~~lr ~-~kt In ~· .. · ~ .. "'......... Ald.

· MH·B nur~ln11tudenta are ellpble for mtmbtnhlp.· omc.. -. . OFFIOID HOURS for tha. Audio Vlaual. Aldt DA,..a for the Nulonal Ttaeh.r IDanUIIatlanl.

Depanment for eheeldnt out equl~enU11ve ~· have bltn announaed by Mary Rardln·Biylor Col .... announncl, The· omee, located ln tilt. bue1111nt of offlelal1. · · . . · IDly·Pepper, will bl opened from 8 a.m. to 11 noo~ and MH·B Hnlora who plan to teuh · Hhoolma:r Ukt tilt from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. on Mondaya, WldMICiaya aad teR' Nov. 10, · ~rr8 and April I, una, at 111 WtU. Frldaya. Seltnee Bulldlnt. · Prolpee\lve ltudtntl muat ,..

()ABJN RI:SIDRVATIONS for the Glorlet.ta A ... m. nlllt.er to take the tilt, . bly In Olorltttl, New Mtxleo. an RUI a~Uable. · f"udent.t wllhlillloeal Information un oonta" the

Due to lnereiHd eoat.l, the eharP, for \ht .Uln will JCcluu'lon · DIPII'tment at MH·B. , · ' bl p per dar or t10 per w•k, plilil " ,..,.Uon OO'I'OBIR 18 II the lilt. clay to ma1&t a_ppllea\lolt for '" per penon, per w•k to IOVII' llllunnee on •o.•.mbt.rthlp Ia ,~.Pel Mu ~~'-or ""·Alpha_ Phi·. oeeupanta, . p

People a\te'ldlnl lhould ~vldt IIMM and food Malt ltudent.t tnrollld 1t · ,...., Hardln~BI:rtor IUPP.Illl. ChirP- foio the ubln 'Will bl_pild at the Marr Oollt .. in tllpble for memt.erthlp and mill\ oiKIIn a Hardln·BIJllr Oollep Bull'*' Oftlti after returalq a,q_ _ll'adt point 1¥""'' · · · and l&tjl..., Ill-~ up ill \lie oftlet ol Dr. WOllam . · Mtttlnpan 11th Tltur~t·~ n a.m. lll't"• APO Ancllrloft, ¥ .... ........_II....._.. affaire It MH•B, roona, lliOnd lloor of the' Mabtt·lt..-·O.Mtr,.

HONOR · PRIVILIO. for dorm ltudlnta. "'w . A ITUDINT aVANGaLI•¥ ~ CUile wau· drt11 IOdt rqulltlou ... •-:-:.1•11111111 l'iltl In · bl .Oft, I throultl' U froln t p,1ft, tO 10141 p.m. a. "'' I

undtlt-ted ..... wen dll4. . "~. tltl ltudtnt Stlldtnt Lift Olnter· ...... on , .... u.-.· ._..... . · ·aovirn'i\;ln\ ~tloii111Mtln1 lip\. IIi · · · la:rtor 'Oollti••maM7"' · I "'!'ftf'· ·~· ·

M • ·: .: • l .1: :· -:;:"' • ·: ~~ o •',~ , .. • .~7·,:~;• 0 ' ( 0

THE. ROYAL AOADI:MIA SOOII!lTY. 1r.i1l ,...nt Rhythm and Bon1, an annual ,.....nt&t.lon 'il eampua talent oet. 4~ In Townaencl Audltorhnn~.blllnnln1 at T:ao· p.m. . . · _,.. ·• .. ... ,~ ,. :-'., .

THE SPANISH CLUB Ia openec1 to major,~. inlnon · ud elementarr· lllljon with , a ·-'lplieJ1IIatiOI In

Spanlah; Dun are .1.00 _per' ..... .., ................. . . are ev~J ant and third. Tuetdq lD lla,NJ l(ilht 18:

noon. . · · ! ~· , · '· .. n .. · THE BRUIN BRIGADI, itllntiJ', ........... o.- ·~ .-.

the MH·B eampua to pi'OIIIGW · .. tohOctl. ~t;;:•htld .. : · •'eetlona S.jK. 18 to •*' ~ ~lliltn aftd·· hat·lir11 '· ···· · · '· . ,. .r'"'1'~'"· •• ..., .. • •

Mn. .Jim Plant, .apouor, .iaad-'• .iae,"U.~,.._. with th•llUtlelll@tlon aad f• .. ttaaUhll -..i ~ • · . forward lor-MH·B. at•••:a.wiWMd ia'~IM· thi .. Bruin· Brlpde lhould .oonuet -~ PIMfba, .Jolt11011 . Dorm~'.; ' . •. .. : ':·. ·. . .. ,. . ' '. '

··.,=."::':':.. ;:.::.a::~:.~-:r.w::=. blforthand. · · · . . .. _ ·· · · -~ . THI.~CIMIJN'I' OINTIIR II ... ~~---­

of ltudlntl to .fill emp'-Mnt v•..._ : '' . MlnJ' fullo\lme' ~ ';pee~~liJ ...........

an avaPablll u .,.. m.., _.tiiM ~ !·•• .u -~·llttl_nland odd_, ,Job~.. ·-." '. ,_ .. · ·• ·· .. · ,· ·• • ·,

Studtntl Ia*'""" II·.~ ..... ,..· ....,.n~ , . "...., with."'' P~•• ~····\for··• ··~ , o-nlnp.· ·.Pai'Whnt lftiplmnta\ __. .......... ·~t'fril, ... • ·· -ltnliri In n~~~MraiMI Dlt.;.. :~:;.... ....... • · · ll forti ., . ·. . .: "~·~~~ ·.· .. ~~·-~~

I ' ',· , ... , '' . ~·· , . , '.: ' ,'-'",,',•; r : . ,

IN~IVIDU~L PI~::~ tlli JRrllliic .. Yktl · .. · at nJIAratiOn ma; bt ~tll-up.•ln ·\lit ;~too~~lltlft, · blllnnhlf 11,:1.1.•~ ..,,: .. · :.~ .:•;:~ ·.\. ;f,': ., · • , · Tht~t ...... 'WW.·tlt .,p,-Jil'~ "-tit"lio' ... .,.. ·1\ : .· '·.' ....,,,..,._.,Ud.M:•"-"•• ... ~ ': ... ~·-··,•\ ·. . .

' "'"'" .... ., ......... i ..... l 1 i"'-'"" ,''''i<l, ............ ,,.. ..... _,.., ... : .-.:- ... lilt tdttor,·Bu ...... ·:,: H·,. ,- '-:::' .~ .. _,,,~;:·:

h' • ! .. ·' J, ··.: ·•, 1

••"I'

: ~· . • . .. I

... 1~·-··x· .. _: • ••. • ,,.f. •I. ,

,,: .,, . 'i.· ...

':

-news 3

the bells

·· .. Untitled • • •

. I.

UNTI'fLED:.

''life __ is like _a poem-• •. "

Having pc)ems p~bllshed in the "An1_1ual -Anthology of .College Poetry" was the last thing Betsy Adams expeeted when she ~te her disillusions of Christmas.

''The day after Christmas in 1970," Miss Adams .Jaid, ''I

· notieed some of the fakeness of Christ~as. People lost the true meaning of Cbristmas."-

Life is ~ a poem- ''They gave too many gifts and -aft interesting title, not enough. of them~lves ; .. this

is what inspired nie to write .· OfUI.that appeals to the eye·\ poetry." Last April, Betsy was

. --.-. ~ym __ m!t lit&es: to ~ _ - _ mPr· formedh by the National Poet!')' · ess, t at a poem she submitted.

the em'a ring. . was to be_ published in the "An-· -mocf.eat length to Blow . nual Anthology of College Poe- .

. Sim 'licit mad dignit - try." c -... P. Y - • _ Y · Tlie poem, "Untitled: 'life is

poem.J .iwd 0. a book.,;:.·_ like a poem' · ... ·," was written _ -.,w -~ • atnactaN Dec:. 26, urio and pertains to

710 p(Utenu is tlae b.e•t Bel/ : _emUtn&cted piAice of life-. poetf"!J~

.· .........

people who li;~- to be a ~me '. · · rather than a per&Ori, said Betsy - · Adams. . · ·· ·_

A neweomer to PQetry~ Betsy likes to relate a poem to a person.

· "H you think about it, a poe1n is like a person. It ean hav:e moods, whether it be sad, joyful, or eute. I )ike to write· about people and poetry. People are (ree, with no limitations like those of a short story," ex,plained the tall, green- · eyed brunette. · ..

Whe11 asked ~ eompare her life to a poem; Betsy· said, "My life is like a . poem without rhyming linea .. I do, things dif­ferently. and unexpected, like a free verse." .

Betsy aequired early journal- · _aitie intereSts ·rroni her .mother, who is ·editor of the 8llallee

.....

'l'ribaM in Silsbee, Texas. · Baptist Chureh, she sang in the "I c:an still remember following youih ehoir and was editor of the

my mother around -in the news- ehureh newspaper,- the C.B. Pa· paper offiee when ·1 was small. per. Her business manners interested A- hopeful journalism major, me and I later became faaeinated Betsy will transfer to Sam Hous­when the newspaper was pub- ton State in Huntsville after this llilhed." she said. semester. She does express some

A 1971 graduate of Kirbyville sadness in leaving Mary Hardin­High Sehool, Betsy was assistant Baylor College, where she lear-

.-~:-- ·-:JSEA----o· l·s·a·us· -s··a· s·----J··aa·m- ·T·a·-a·ch·lng =w:=.r.;i.h~~~~~:! ::n=a'='d:::e:e:.~~e::o~: _ _ .. . . _ ·· · : , ·; · ·. · ··- . . : · · . . : · · . . her interest in journalism, other are re_ally like. -·. ·.-->.:·:.~·· · __ :_ ,_: '· .. · -... :. · ·· -· '·- _·-. · ... _. _·· . :. ·.:.'.· · .. · . - _hobblea'includerplayingthe pi· -·; .

-· ·-.r.~;?~-~.a,-YJ~i~~-:~\r..:~~c .. ·~~~-·~~·~~-::.~•.;.n: tark-: i i!laa. u•::_Jiac~.-.•• ~.-~i-- ,::~:=--:l:t·=:.~- ~:. · to: sr-:~tioit~' how:: .. ~~Jltt~t~~ •-••·B&t'': ."' ~-::Th ."~ ..... -~;ai':;: ... f.e•,'!llliia~·hap HhociJ litu:' 'in dra ·•IJi--:'AnCI'' tin·'··&;- : . re •-ua era ure ···-"iiiii· -~·:<l!l..:;·- ~-M,~nte~-·~~:i~\;~--, -. ,~; ... _.,.:~: .... ::la_:.~-~;in"_~!~nta:~~-· ,,_..._· ;7itUclenti..elt e'r~' of~'•·· :~ic-•~- v:· eauae, -"God-gave me the talent ::bljffifJ!+.l~-~\' .. ·_t· ·:: ~~~;;;Jiam_ : ~~-~~t1:~_:··:· tv~-- th~l:r _.~-''Was·~_·_ ·.:ua~-UaJ.alif.l' ......... i ._. plis'hme_ nta have t:.n -dis;;:. :~n!/h;~C:,.tr;.,.to ..!:1~~n~~:!

. (.~·~'lit.~mP~;~l~ :;: ;r· :~: · . '_ .:. ::~: · : CJaiilnatelt alacl Ute way t.he~ f•l ~ • experience for .all. · . _ . in art· ahowa. . pattern• or atructures in the life . : '" _,''' •:(;~::';'{'~":iSI'•i:'\! f.-·' ; ;.:· ... -- ... · -~ ' I . abo~ llf.e;~ : ' '' . . . - . :- . The offictira of TSEA for _t.he - Anot~er intereet in lletay'alife of Betsy Adams, but he .. definite .·. ~:~~·.j~e(;~r···Y~ ;t.'h_e ·'. · .- ··, _ 1 --· -.-,_- ••. 19'18-74 Hhool,year were lntro- Ia her churc:h work. An -active palinlifeilto"beinpeaeewith :dali")~.tilenoJf.._.lt. ~team ·. ,. Mr! KlrkpatrlcJc~emo,_wated dueed. They an VanD)' Boylea, memberoftheKirbyvilleCentral· God."

... taupt tiy Mr. ~ilcl Mn. Durward.·· some ofthe exerelMI clone in this president; Bonnie Bone, vlee · · ·:- . . < ·· . i . prealdent; BOla Epenon, aeere­

tai'J·t.reaaurer; Sandy Boalea, histol'ian;·Danette &owei'J and Sherry Emery, IOCI&I. chairmen; and Ja.nlce Andrewa, publicity. . TaylOr AIUIOUnoes Cast ..

'~il..~- F~a:,;: LRerary Magazine R••uests Input · .. :rMlvakanilouaeld ,Mr. Chlrleil - "The Cup. of TnmbUnl'' is the · -· •o,:TajJoiii"tuukJ.Ipollor. ' --· ·:atory ·of t.he life of betrleh GaJie,Llftdntr, a junior_ phJ· arroulld by ao many oontrl· . - Enti'J forma must aceompany . . · -. '· .. ;: · ';., · .- · - : .. · aons-offor, a Luthtran ·mlntater Ileal education major flyn,t Houl·. but.lonalut. year was more than · eaeh article and may be obtained _ .: . ~ JOI'j•n Kooh-wUI be.pla_ yid bJ. In N&ll_ _ Gel'lftlny, who •_hoM to ton,· has been 'nailed lftiDIPnl · _patU,inr." · · · · - · at the bookstore, llbrarr, Mre.

· :: pou1111 .JioHOill, ~nlor -1~h folloW ChrlA _'rathtr than the tdl&or of the "laJiorlan" for t.ht - - The dudllnt ' for entrlea for Lonr'• omee or by contact.lnr · · _:inajOf.'hm ''tt ... plt •. Ot~tr -e~~ar-__ _ N&ll pvernmtnt. ·At a_ re1111t' of 1178-'14 aehool ~· - · · thll rear'• "Baylorlan" haa .. been Ml•• Irvin or Ml11 Lindner. -- ··llten:art Htlnrieh MIUir, Rleh·. hll deetalon, he was eaeeuhd bJ ·-eontrlbutlnl -editor wUI bt ·11ft aa Dte.l.lnttrelttd atudenta Penon.lnwrelted In worklnr on

· · · ·-: ar.~J:l'er-11 . Htlmil lkhnalclt · the N~ pvernmenqn lNI. · Nane' ·Irvin, • ttnlor toelal ehould 11nd ereatw• wrlt.lnralacl t.he "Birlorlan" ahould contact . · . Ra...sJ:OIIWIODI Ohrllto_lhtr AI· ~· pi&J will _bt ~ueed ea Hlenee m~,. Auatlft. Other ·' art work to the "Biylorlan," Mra. Lonr or on• of the editon.

.. ._ Gar,. :Linhlm1 .Iva Von .November t and to· at etpt membiN of ·tht ataff- wW bt - · · · Jt'-i'.Manha DanUkol Dr. P~ul o'cloek in the evenlnr. . De..,_ . Bmlt.hi ~lt't ...,, :and W' •. A . 0 . . I .

. ':1•.: .. ,··· .. ·t·h.-. b. 1'1 ~··i?rii ·-·w· ; ~·~ .r.llll Ill II I . I e.. --e s ~~loellt.Jif·'h•.-••·hal Ani omen• " n .... .. campnr. IW mm nr. tenn •• · ' · · · · · · had llveral~-poe111 publllhtd In- . IOCIIatlon hu_.~\1 purpott In the bl~mln\on, aoftball and other

· · ·. . - . "Amttlia Imp" u well u tht devt~lopmtnt of aptrlt. PlaJinl phJtleal actlvltlea, mach new ,... . -~:-. · . · .. :' . . , "lolorlan" , . ~ · , t.he Pmt .. for Jhe uke· of 'the event or Intramural will be

. ,. ·. :. Publl1htd. w"klr at Marr 'Hardln·la)'lor .. Oo= ~ P,lrt · ... :':f lr~='IJC''" ~'T'~"'f:';.;:'M':r t!'.f~t~~ :::'::'ea1'!,,\r;_ c;l!:C J:\h!

· ·. · O,f the:atudtnt aetlvltr. Return poltap·paran .DaWrtd. ihltf. illttltt of· tht judltl~i ~II"'-"'' lntramurall ,,. bullet.ln board• of eaeh dorm, ln : , at..the Poet Offtae In Belton, Texu, u HGOnd-elul matter . . tlrueh of dtt, ltudtnt o,vern·- . . no_t ex~ualvelr for ~.,_. who are the poat omee, and In \he um.

\ ','1 undtr the Aot of Maroh a, 11'f8. ' ' . ' '· . 'nint.'AIIIIII~.~.nd tnuurer ' .. _., .. ..,..,~IN mort for lnterllttd atudenu ahould also . . . . .. · . · . · · · of_"'' 111~or ..., illoli wh!;~avt 11M pi&Jtd manr,. eontaet. their ell•• n~tHnta·

; .•. :_ Ntwlllclltor, ...... ~.-.......................................... vo~ Ropldnl ' . ,, ' . " ' •••• Wt .,. not. ,, ... to tlVII 01' the olfleera or WRA. . . ' Aillatant N•w•·IDdlt.or ......................... ,.,,, ... ,,JD._ Pu.br - • -.~·-~·,-.Hardin· . """' .. at~....-.. • meniJ to 'ftle exeoutlve board eoulau

... · -. · · · ~~-··· •-1 Nl•- · . •;1a.;.a·8-t•h · -IUiar'l llttarr Mlllillt• II 1 dl.vt~ ptt IH .fltMIIt and or. Garlt Lindner, prttldtntJ .. ; · ·.:·_(.~/:.-~~~on,......--"""'""""."'"''""""""'"'"~"'·. "' - ... " - ""'''lon of.eurrtt\ -••"••• b~v~ r;.~:;. , · ' Bherrr llmerJ, vlot ,.....nt1

-:-, •... 'f\•.1~> .gopr-ldltor_ '"."'""""""'""""~'"'!'~'"'~"·"'""''""'~' Ol'll_i thoulll •. ~ ....... ald.ldNii,'? . . ~t~:- Pf911'1mt tMOm• Glorll B!Jnoo. '"""'_ rr~tnuu· I ' ·i' ' .·.- _Bpartaldltor .... ~ .......................................... ~ ..... ..,~ ........ ~ u ..... _ ••. "'""" .. ,.. 1'-V""" of.ut.lvltllt IUOh "" anci.Mra •. 011~ ....... .

I ' ' ~ I I / I \ 0 I I

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I .'J/•,,' '•· t'·

, '.1'1 ,·,.·' .. ' · .. :''· ... '. ".

:·.i ' ..

.:·~ .. ....:;.,.c-..... ~;.flt.Q!<• ....... ' ~,.._-----------~--------------.--,--:---------------~--------

---~~ .......

4 the bells

Teanis Teall Set After Active Sunanaer This summer members of the

MH-BC tennis team participated in several tournaments across the country.

Roberto Trogola, sophomore from Johannesburg, South Af­rica, surprised everyone around the state by winning the Texas Championship Singles. Robert and his partner, Craig Gold, also from Johannesburg, placed sec· ond in the doubles competition.

Sharon Hill, sophomore, won the Waco Open Women's Singles and the TAAF Championship.

Reljo Tuomola, international student from Finland, partici· pated in several tournaments, winning the Beaumont Open, Harlingen Open, and the MeAl· len Open. While he ~id not win, Reljo showed his ability in . the U.S. Clay Court Championship, the U. S. Grass Courts, and the

U.S. National Open at Forest going to be playing bigger Evans, Eve Nicholson, and Deb-Hill, N.Y. schools that are better. hie Sima. ·-....

Melvin Collazo, a Japanese- "We are trying to get the team Scheduled tournaments · · for American, won the Bryan-Col· united," Gold went on to say. this fall are the Pasadena Octo­lege .Station Juniors Champion· This semester the members .. of berfest, USLTA Juniors Cham· · ship, and WTAAF Champion· . the team will ~ gOing to p&rti; · pionship' in: Dallas, the West ship, and the Killeen City Cham· cipate In tournamen.ts individu- Texas Open at San. Angelo, and pionship. . ally RetuJ'ning playen . are . Col· the Laredo .. International. .

Gold said, "We ·expect to have lar.o,(lold, Togola, Tuomola, Hill, , ..• Dr~ ·Lewis Hill~)', ~h;;:aa.id. a pretty goOd ·year, but we inaJ. . Oebbnle. Ham,: .St~phaliie ~~- t.h·e plaY.erl are.· atlll trrlng to . not. win as many matehes as wo rett, and .Janice. DeBolt. , ·Ne" .. deeide:.on othe.r: tournamen~: for;~ . did last semester, because we're players are Susan Bre\Y_er, .Janie thia}all; ', .. •, · . .. · ·

''

MH·B Bruins Begin Second Year Fans Bear Wat~hh;ig ;: . ' by MARGIE the effect of •iQGGGOOOOOOIII" -.

or "IDT THAT BALLI" or per· by MICHAEL WILLIAMS

The Mary Hardin-Baylor Bru· · Ins havo begun their second year or play after pos~ing a fine 5·1 abbreviated aeaaon laat year. Druin supporter• are hoping the momentum will carry over thla year.

Jim Plant playa third baH, He brinKS with him the experience of rive yeara playing time with the New York Meta and alao a atlnt with the Mlnneaota Twlna. He ia a phyalcal education major and with hie wife, Sandy, aervea II director or Johnaon Dorm.

Jim. Roaa or Houaton Ia a M'llneral bualne•• major. He haa two yoara of /rofeaelonal ball· playing behln him with the Kanu• City Roy111.

Mark Jon•• eredita a year with tho Atlanta Brave• and a year with tho Botton Red Sox to hi• reeord. Ht pltehea for the Bruin• and I• a phyalcaledueatlon major from Fort Worth,

Hal Duea, who al10 rttchta, plana to plar profeaalona ball In the future. He eurren~ly aerve1 •• Sport• Information Dlreetor.

PleaNnton, Texaa,la the.hom• of Pete Powell, who playa ahort• atop. He played two yean with the Olnalnnattl Red• before com· ln1 to MH·B to maJor In bualne11.

A do"blt-hllder, Mark lord .

divides his time between the Milt Cates, alao a catcher, lists ouUield and the pitching mound. some lntereatlng hobble• for a

His hometown is Lewiaville, Texaa.

An outfielder, Mark Williams Ia also a pre-law major. He calla Nacol{doches, home. . . A Beltonlan, Walter Burtchell playa outfield, Hla major ia behavioral aclenee,

Claimln1 flehlngia hla favorite hobby, B. J. Mackey, a phyelcal education major, . brlnr• two yoara experience to the Brulna. He Uvea In Temple.

Roland Sou, a catcher, Ia from Stafford and a phyelcal education major.

baHball· player. All)ong· them:

glrla, huntlnlf, fishinlf, and roek music. . The youngtat mem~r of the team, Baron Porter, al10 like• to 'hunt. He Ia a pitcher and Ia from Temple.

Kevin Wela1 from Lewllvllle, playa ncond bue In addition to hia pre·law etudlea.

Coaehe• for the team are Dr. Daniel Atha, of the phralcal education department, and Red Murff, reglonal aooutln1 1uper· vl10r for the Montreal IDxpoe.

MICHAELS haps "TOUCHDOWNIII .WHOO· Have you ever . ;,ondered · PEEIII" Well •. ahe'agot the apirlt

about the people who .10 to thole , . any~ay • · baaeball gamea no one heara · Then we have . the allent, about? If you have, It mllht Juat atarlngapeetator. Lllce a rock 1he be worth your while to check It alta ·~~dfut1y In her nat, like a out. Come out 10m• day we have hawk ahe peera throuab/ the aacheduled pme and wateh the baekatop.to.thtlnfteld. The-onl)' action. If there'• not enouah In Interruption• abe notice• II when the field, juat look around. the aereamtr falla oft. her ~h There'• plenty In the ltanda. Into the atarer.

All typn of people 10 to ·the · Anotber type eould be '·d••: ball pmta now·a·day1, J'or In· erlbed aa tbe ap~trentlee announ 1tanee, we have tbe bule eer, J'eY.erllhly abe trleato kHft acreamer. She. ~for ..It'• uaually MOre. What wu that, HBY! a female) yell• and aereama at What wu It? Walt, not whatm'

· the top of her lunp 10methlnl·to ~She'• 10 buay . aaklnl what . hap~ned ahe never heara the

A G • 1 ~. W • eW actual aoeountl) .. · 11 • ..7. Y I Oh well, thOH ~re only i few of

Thla 11 my column for rou. I will anawer any 1por~1 related queatlon1 with facta and hope· fully a little lnal1ht from the lpettltor'l point of YltW,

I've ut on many bleaeherl, walked many 11'Hna and eh11red many teama. So, throurh IIIOo clatlon, I've learned a few tlpa that make the 1un not. ao hot and the rain not 10 wet, thu1 l11rnlnr to enjoy lift In the lpctrtl arena.

1 hope that throu1h thla eol· um~ o.ur 111hool will ftnd a eomlnr

by SAN'DV PLANT the •PICilal• we have out at t.he · fteld, llut I'IIIUII'antll JOU1 they

topt.her bttwHn atudlntl 1nd. Slptd~ all nrvtl a .prettr· bniiOI'tlnt our athle\lc . prolf'ama,. 1n thta Rolle ftllrpoli, Ju•t blln1 there. "What'• way, Marr Hardln·BaJior will that, you liy? SuppoH you·dan't remain the family It hu alwara Dear Rolle, , ft~ Into anl of tht · eattprln been,, throu1h ehanllnl tlmta. A "pand alam" l1 allnl t.er· 11~ .abovt? Well, ~on't worrr

So, let -;n• Invite rour qu•• . mlnoiOu for 1 four·run ·homt about thltl Oome aut .. and tU~· tiona, Don t be ahy, becau11 a ~un. Thla meani· thll'l are t.hne P.Grt JOur "'~!:/.our own wayl "birdie~· doean1t neceauriiJ •fly men·on·blle whttn.a homerun II And· tr rou · ··to find tht and a "fir" you don't nneuarliJ hit, whlah ldd1 four ~Inti to the . m1Htllln10u1 _..l we havt a

•w,:! •. write me at Box 88'7, ·uke =:;..~~~~~ J:::;:,•~:.-.:J =~~liquid,~~~~~ th• Bruin thl11 down when thll happena. · . ·

Dtar Sandy, · What. Ia a ""and •lam"?

Your~, llndJ

In"'' lUi, .Ome.an4 •u,.n

r.:' tllm •. lt11 1 . .,.., · •• ,.... oi, 'whotvtr r~.~NI ·· · ·· ·

" ,I JW

~ ' I '· ' ~ I

CONVOCATION 1973.

Bobby: What's the matter Bill? Bill: Just checking tee times, boss.

BSU- Evangelism Clinic Set for Oct. 8-JJ By BET~l' ADAMS.

Several Student groups of five or six people each each scattered around the room with only the rumble of conversation heard. Bits and pieces could be heard­"can't it just be me and ... sharing Christ is . . . the hard part is saying it." The scene, the people, the conversation, all a part of the Mary Hardin-Baylor Student Un­ion's Student Evangelism Train­ing Clinic.

SETC w~ll be fr.o~ Oct. 8·11 in

four consecutive encounter ses­sions, 9:00-10:30 each night. The clinic will be coordinated by Richard Mangum MH-B BSU Director; Donna Drew, MH-B senior; and Raynelle Dyer, a Student-To-Student worker from Sam Houston State University.

Each session consists of Bible Study relat~ng to evangelism and Group Dynamics, a one-to-one basis of sharing Christ.

According to Donna Drew, the clinic will present new ideas and

. -

methods of sharing faith in Christ and making the student aware of the importance of this witness.

The aim of SETC is to enable students to be better trained in the area of one-to-one witnessing for the upcoming Fall Campus Revival sponsored by the Baptist Student Union. Another aspect of the clinic is to develop Share Groups. These groups will be formed of those who will actually seek to share Christ on the cam­pus.

, •. ,./·-4 ·c1·· A t• t•f ·:.~.r111: s··: .. , ~c 1¥8·' ;,1 ·8

Iegan Career at AIH-8 Editor's Note-This is the first in a series of articles exploring the history of Mary Hardin-Baylor. These articles will be abOut peo­ple, places, and events-both past and present-that have gone Into the making of MH-B tradition,

BY JOY ROST

If Women's Liberation groups had existed .In the 1940s and 1950s, no doubt they would have welcomed Oveta Culp · Hobby with open arms.

When she waa young, Mn. Hobby dreamed of either being a foreign mlaslona1'y or going on stage, But "Mils Spark Plug," as she waa called by her colleagues, was destined to pioneer female lnvolvnment ln journallam, mill· tary lifo Rnd polltlca,

cleaned out old files for six months. For two years she was book editor; wrote editorials for three years and a series of arti­cles on the constitutions of the world; !lnd !\_t the age of 32, she boca me· oxtrl!utlve vice-president of Tho Post.

In 1941' the War Department appointed Mrs. Hobby to lead a now women's publicity bureau which was set up to sell the Army to wives and mothers oC the men. A year later, the Army Invited her to organize and direct the Women's Auxlllary Army Corps, IRter known as tho WAC.

During her aervice as colonel in tho W AC'a, Mrs. Hobby was Rblo to provide the Army with

Born In 19015, Ovota graduated from the University of Texas wlth a law degree, Mrs. Hobby had onrly political lntero1ta. A former student at Mary Hardin· Baylor Collere, she accompanied her father, a member of the · Texll' Leglalature In 1919, to · . AuiUri; During her father's poll· ·. tical h\volvement, Oveta never . · mlased a seaalon. She then be· camo parliamentarian of the Tex· aa Leslalature and wrote a book on parllamentar)' law. At the ap of aa she codified Texaa banklnr law• and at 24, ran for the state letrlalature but wa• defeated.

In 1981 Ovet.a Culp married ISB·year·old William Pettua Hob· by, 18 yeara her aenlor and a former 1overnor of Texaa who waa publisher of The Houaton Pa•t where they flrat met. At The Poat tho newlywed Mrs. Hobby atudled format and

Tht Oulp HobbJ whtn she wu aommander of t.ht WA01 11 dlapla,ed In the MH·B,

women who could £111239 types of noncombatant military jobs. For her cnergentlc work during the war, she became the first woman to receive the Distinguished Service Medal.

Mrs. Hobby refered to herself as a conservative Democrat but supported Republican preslden· tin! candidates. In 1953 President Dwight Eisenhower appointed her Federal Security Admlnl· strator. That same year Mrs. Hobby became the first Secre· tnry of Health, EducRtion, and Welfare In the President's Cabl· not and the second woman to hold a Cabinet post.

As a Cabinet member, Mrs. Hobby preferred not to be called "Mndamo Secretary" aa protocol dictated, but aaked to be refer· red to aa"Mra. Secretary." As an offectlvo executive ahe atlll re· talned hor lntereata In womanly mRttera such as fashion an family lifo, While In Washington she mAde occallonal shopping trlpa to New York where she ordered mRny l(owna, aulta, and hats. . In 191515 Mra. Hobby roalgned from her position due to her i\lllniJ huaband and returned to Houston aa prealdent of 'rho Post, a poaltlon ahe holda today. Evon thou1h Secretary of Troa· 1ury Oeor1o Humphrey called Ovota •tthe beat man ln the Cabl· not", •he will probably beat be remembered for her mistakes aoneernln1 the aonfullon over manulaat.un and dllt.rlbutlon of the Balk polio vacelne, Not onl, did her lnttreau 11• In the areal ol polltlu, mlllur,, and Journal· 11m, but lht also btoame exeeu· Uve dlrtator of the radio 1tatlon, KPRC, nnd waa director of n hRnk.

a student publication of mary hardin-baylor

friday, oct. 5,1973

SGA Town Hall Meets: Aim Is Campus Unity

Town Hall Meetings were in­augurated at 11 p.m. Thursday, in the Spiritual Life Center. Miss Helen Wilson, Student Gov­ernment Association president, stated the purpose of these meetings as being "a chance for students to express their views in an informal, unstructured setting."

These communication sessions will be on a regular basis throughout the school year on the first Thursday of every month at 11 p.m. The time was chosen because most students will be on campus then, said Miss Wilson. This is also the time of the monthly faculty meetings, so the discussions will be student led and student oriented.

For those who have questions of their student leaders, the SGA officers and representatives will be available for conversation. Miss Wilson expressed a desire for more student input into the student governing process.

Along these same lines, she

said that Town Hall meetings will further one of the goals of SGA. that of reaffirming its cam­pus identity. SGA has a new office, stationery, a descriptive brochure and a distinctive seal, Miss Wilson said, and she hopes that these will enable students to recognize their governing body of peers.

She lists as another major goal that of promoting campus unity bet ween students, faculty and administration. The monthly in­

. formal receptions are one means to this end, as they enable faculty, students and admini­strators to come together over light entertainment and refresh­ments and get to know one another, Miss Wilson said.

This month the informal re­ception will be replaced by a campus wide talent show on the 18th. Miss Wilson hopes that students will turn out to compete against, and to merely enjoy the various talents peculiar to the Mary Hardin-Baylor Campus family.

RAINY DAYS AND MONDAYS-And Tueadaya and Wedneadays only lncreaae the number of umbrellas on campus, Staff photographer Ricky Boale1, snapped this picture for the form and not the Information. · Photo by Boales,

Kaleidoscope The BELLS wlll publish lot·

tors to tho editor If they aro no more than 2150 words long, sign· od, and have " phone numbor whore tho aulhor may bo reach· ed.

Editorial comment• mlly he written by tho1e who doslro to oppnae a provloualy printed edl· torlnl If thole lntere1ted wlll contact Tho Della, 15 Ell Popper, Ext. 154, to receive spoclflcatlona and doadlln01.

ALPHA CHI INTTIATION will be Oct. 9, from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. In either the truatoe'a room or faculty loun11e at Mabee Stu· dent Center.

Tho Alpha Chi Fraternity Ia an hnnarRr)' fraternity for Mary Hardln·Paylor College atudentl maintaining n 8.11 lfl'ado point averap.

THE MARY HARDlN·RAY· I.OR COLLEGE Bruin• wlll be Reeking their fifth victory of thll IOIIIIln as thny face tho Tomplo Junior Collel(o Looparda In a hunoflt game for the "Dolton Marching 100" nt 7 p.m. Tueaday, at tho MH·B campus.

Admlaalan to tho l(ame will be 11 for adults nnd 150 cents for children. Tho purJ)OIO of the benefit I• to ralao money for tho hll(h 1chnol band to travel to Pnand11nn, California, for the Ro111 Bowl Pnrado. Tho "Mnr· chinK 100" will b" the only hnnd rllproacntlntr Toxa•.

Thll bamd will mftrch nfter the faurth lnnln11 af the MH·R - TJC gaml',

news Guide To MH·BC Organizations .. DIANE._

PSI THETA An organization for home

ec:onomie majors and minors is the Psi Theta fraternity.

Officers for the organiZation are Harriet Hess, president; Lisa White, vice-president; Robin Murff, secretary; Vonie Hopkins, treasurer; Mic:ki Rose, reporter; and Vicki McClean, historian. Psi Theta sponsor is Mrs. Beverly Hammonds.

WRA The Women's Recreation

Association is to promote recrea­tional activities at Mary Hardin­Baylor College for the benefit of the students.

President of the WRA is Gayle Lindner. Sherry Emery is vice­president. Gloria Blanco is secre­tary-treasurer and Mrs. Barbara Chaney is sponsor.

ROYAL ACADEMIA 800IETY The Royal Academia Society is

the development of leadership and the promotion of culture through an appreciation of art, literature and loyalty.

The 1973-74 Royal Academia Society officers are Donna Drew, president; Joy Edwards, vice­president; Pam Kein, secretary; Gloria Mattson, treasurer; Deb­bie Thomas, sergeant-at-arms, keeper of archives and parlia­mentarian. Mr.Gerald Dingus and Dr. Beatrice Huston are. sponsors.

SCIENCE CLUB Newly elected officers for the

science club are Cathy Smith, president; Fred Schubert, vice­president; Leslie Heath, secreta­ry; Kay Cowen, treasurer; and Terri Webb, soeial chairman. Sponsors are Dr. Charles Barker and Dr. Donald Jernigan.

Students Interested In science may join the club which pro­motes studying the different aspects in the field of acience.

SENIOR CLASS Leaders or the 1978-74 grad­

uat.ing claaa of Mary Hardin· Baylor College are Sharon Pa· voggi, preaident; Carolyn Tice, vice-preaident; Nancy Irvin, treasurer; Kathi Foater, aecre· tary; and aponaora are Dr. Chari· ea Barker and Mra. Edna Bridg· ...

REGALIANI The Regaliana Ia an organiaa·

tlon that repreaenta Mary Har· din·Baylor Collep alnpng pop­ular apiritual aonp.

Member& of the Rlpliana are Jennifer Jordon, Terri J'yke, Linda Glau, Liaa Jordon, Kay Parmer, Bandy WhHita, Wayne Bpoonta,~ndfChaUJOn,Georll Harrlaon and Larry Daw10n.

ITtJDIM' GOVUNMIINT AIIOCIA1'10N

The .Student Government A1101iatlon Ia made up of ltu· dent110Ytrnln1 thematlv .. -at.udent. partlelpat.lon In eampu polltlel, a~ln1 out for atudttnt rlpta and promotl11 eampu unltr.

Tht oftleerl of t.ht trra.'r4 Student. Oovel'llllltftt AIIOIIatlon are Prttldent. Heltn Wllaon, Junlor1 Vlet·pretldtnt Doana brew, aenlor1 llvelrn lmlt.h, Hnlor, Ia.........,. 11id Trlllur· er Cindy '"'"' ~· 'l'ht .............................. WliUIM Harlow aad ltewan.

By JANICE ANDREWS Students at Mary Hardin-Baylor College may

find that many of their varied interests may be dev~loped within certain campus organizations. Such organizations provide a means for student achievement and scholarship, and a greater interest along the praeticallines in which s student may wish to specialize.

Many of the clubs are affiliated with national. state and regional. organizations whose member­ship includes other leadiDg colleges and universi­ties. Others are departmental clubs whieb ineteaae the student's knowledge in the area of bia future career.

Other organizations involve the entire student body in their aetivities. The aim of some organizations on campus is to seek to deV.lop qualities of leadership, to promote eulture, and to promote college activities.

Clubs and organizations are one way a person can express his individuality and personal opinions. The student can interact with other people in one common purpose, and have a common bond with other members, old and new. Clube and O..pmz&~ tiona are an important part of edueation - it is people being with people, learning and growing together. ·

BODY PAINT- Tile HlaorleaiPIIIIIud Alplla Phi Omep frMeraltiM ol 111rr Jlanlla.luiM' ~added I toueh oftolor M \M foiiYia laA IMuMar lllll'lllnlo

'l'he foUntala1 . loeiWd Ia ,_, of tht MH·I -pul!e wu ........ .., ..... of •••• o .... paln\ld .,.. .. IH ··"' .. , "" ......... PhiJI, .. ,.. JIIMII~ fouiUia .. - u 111111 projM tlt Hll Plllla dill, I' wu 10111&11111 that ....... to ... doM," ................. PNIIdeatNIMJ Irvin. Milar, ...... .., ........

YOUNG REPUBUC.ANS The Young Republican& is for

the student that would like a choice of political ·partie& in a district which is predominan\ly . Democrat.

The chairman of· Young Re­publicans· is Margie Benneaey and Mrs. Mary Long is sponsor.

NUBSING STUDENTS A88001ATION

Representing the body of student nurses on campus is the Nursing Students Asaoeiation.

Karen Reinke, president; George Bush, first viee presi- . dent; Cindy Ktl9hl, second vice president; Grace McCaugherty, recording secretary; Cheryl Moore, corresponding seeretary;. Delores Chupik, treasurer; and Cathy Hofman, parliamentarian are the 1973-74 officers. Dr •. LaVerne Gallman, ·Mrs. Grace ·Labaj and Mn·Theda·Mufield are -the spoiUIOI'8.

PBI EPSILON MU .. Phi Epsilon Mu is a p!'9fession·

al organization for health and physical education majora. . Its purpose is to develop the indi· vidual professionally.

The 1973-74 officen are Deb­bie Sims, president; JO. Mackey, vice-president; Sherry Emery, secretary-treasurer; Gayle Lind· ner and Donna Curb, publica­tions. The sponsor• are Mrs. Barbara Chaney, Dr. Daniel. Atha and Dr. Lewis Hilley • ...

ALPHA MtJ.G.uoiA . Alpha Mu Gamma is an honor·

ary foreign ·language aoeiety. The 1973-74 officers are Chris·

tie Malone, preaident; Evelyn Smith, -viee-prealdent; Minnie Lewellen, secretary; and Carolyn Hall, treaaurer. Sponaora for the organization are Mra. Minnie Henderson and Mr. Gerald Ding· us.

~LPBA PHI OMEGA Alpha Phi Omega Ia a national

aervice fraternity. The 1978-74 officers are Jim Edwarda, presi­dent; Ken Stewart, memberahip viee·preaident; Joe Mackey, publicity vice-prealdent; Rusty Carroll and Freddy Floyd, eo-. chairman of project&.

Mr. WOllam Barlow, Mr. Ted Austin and .Mn. Minnie Hender­IOn are apon10n.

IAIIIALL CL1JI · The baleball elub Ia a new

orpniaat.lon on ·the · eampua of Mary Hardin·Barlor Colltp.

omeert for tht new orpnlla· t.lon are Jim Plant, . preaident1 Jim Roll, vleeo~lden\1 Joe Maell.,, ......,, Mark .Jonit, t.reaaurer, MlltoD Catea, ttr· •••nt·at·armtl Roland Boaa, parllament.arlan and Hal Duet. lporU laformat.lon eoordllator.

IP~CLIJI ""'~ The lpanllh Club Ia u arpal-: · ·

ut.lon fOr lftlont ll!ljorln1 • mlnorlllla ·~ ........... II tile ' == :..::&.-r.: Thet,...,......... ' . Luat. I ... , II ··~att · : Lupe ......... .lali'rt II Ylle :. ·:

=•••'' Marla lla"l••••·· · ... 1 Ia treaeunr. Oll.,la,le · .. ·: I .. .._,., la ......,~' ,; '

lid Ml ..... I --~· (1: ..... · • n,...., Tile ~ of. U.:: . lillllll Club II IIN.'IIIIIdt::":. --~~-··· ......... , .. ,., .. :. ' ..

Ill ..., Ito f tl ••lilt

I I ...

~ment the bells 3 •• More About Orga•izatio•s

TSEA. The Texas State Educators

Aseociation iii an organization for future teachers that are interest­ed in the. new techniques of teaching.··

The offieers are Vanny Bolsins, president; Bonnie Bone, vice­president; Rilla Eoerson, secre­tary-treasurer; Sandy Boales, historian; Janice Andrews, publicity; and Danette Lowery

. and Sherry Emery, social chair­"lllen.

THE BLUEBONNET The Bluebonnet staff of 1973

consists of fresJuDan Norman Northen, editor; senior. Linda Dodgen, faeulty and copy; fresh­man Claudia Deaton, aetivities; and junior Jan Westfall and freshman Riek Boales, photog­raphers.

Mr. Ron Hurt, publications advisor, is sponsor. Require­ments for staff members is one year of working experienee on a yearbook.

YOUNG DEMOCRATS SIGMA TAU DELTA The 1973-74 offieera for the Senior Lynn Eubanks is the

Young Democrats are Pam Kein, Sigma Tau Delta President for senior, President; Debbie Thom- 19'13. as, junior, Viee President; Laura . Other officers are seniors Rilla Adair, sophomore, Secretary; Eproson, vice-president; Joy Jan Weaifall, juniOr, Activities Host, secretary-treaaurer; and ChairpersOn; and Minnie Luelle- Janet Aurentz, historian and wen alid Beverly Steele, · reporter. Sponsor is Dr. Iva Activities Commi~tee. ·Fussell, chairman of the com-

munications department. English majors and minora

· BRUIN BRIGADE with a 2.5 overall grade point The Bruin Brigade was reeent- · average and a 3.0 grade point

ly formed at Mary Hardin-Baylor average in English with interests College to promote school spirit. to read good literature are

Elected officers are junior invited to join. Gloria MattSOn, captain; · eopho­more Carol Wilkins. e»c:aptain; junior Sylvia Duckens, first lieutenant; and freshman Lisa Jordon, second lieutenant. Mrs. Jim Plant is sponsor.

TBEBELLS The 1973-74 staff of The Bells

are senior Evelyn Smith, editor; sophomore Diane Parker, news editor; freshman Cindy Ortiz, copy editor; sophomore Michael Williams, sports editor; and freshman Rick Boales, photogra­pher. Mr. Ron Hurt, instructor of journalism and dlrec:tor of college information, is sponsor.

SIGMA ALPHA IOI'A . . Sigma Alpha Iota is classified as an international professional fraternity for women in the field of music. The faculty of ·Mary Hardin-Baylor College must recommend a student for the club.

The officers are senior Kathi Foster, president; junior Darla Herrington, vice - president; junior Sue Beck, secretary; sophomore Betty Jo Wil11on, treasurer; and senior Sarah Brown, song leader. Sponsors for the fraternity are Mrs. Gary Hudgens and Mrs.Guy WUson.

MB-BBAND The newly formed band pro­

gram at Mary Hardin-Baylor College bas elected offieera.

Sophomores Julie Stewart and Joyee Kloke are president and viee - president. respectively. Theresa Augilar, freshman, is secretary and librarian is fresh­man Reunne Bower. Mr. Jim Miller, MB-B band director, is sponsor.

JUNIOR CLASS _ Donna Curb is junior elass presilftnt. Other officers are J aniee Andrews, vice-president; Lisa White, secretary; and Cheryl Moore, treasurer •. Class sponson are Mrs. Barbara Chan­ey and Dr. Daniel Atha.

LATIN AMERICAN SCBOLABSBIP

Helping others with the com­munity and helping other stu­dents with their Spanish, the Latin American Club was brought toPther by the Texas Baptist Convention for Latin American Students.

Officers for 1973-74 include Olga Salazar, president; Yolanda Godsey, vice-president; · Elodia McGuire, secretary; and Liz Morales and Maria Martinez. social and programs chairmen.

PHI BETA LAMBDA Phi Beta Lambda is a national

level organization of young busi· nesa leaders and its purpose is to uphold business integrity, ser­viee and opportunity.

Officers this year are Henry De Armes, president; Richard Bonham, acting treasurer; Avon­dale Crockett, acting correspond­ing seeretary; and sponsors are Dr. Beatrice Hutson and· Mrs. Joyee Barnes.

FRESHMAN CLASS With four years ahead, the

freshman class has elected om-eers for 1973-74. .

Their leaders are Andi Alvara" do, president; Kim Brazier, vice­president; Eve Nicholson, secre­tary; and Connie Miller, treasur­er. Sponsors are Mrs. Parker and Dr. William Hutmacher.

BI8TORICAL PIIILA SOCIETY Founded in 18&1 by Mn. Eli

Moore Townsend. the Historic:al Phila Society has offered its members friendship with social, spiritual and intellectual enligbt­ment;

Offieers are Nancy Irvin, pres­ident; Carolyn Tiee, vice-presi­dent; Dorothy Dunn, second vice-president; Kathi Foster, recording secretary; Sherry Balenger, alumnae secretary; Sandy Strength. treasurer; Gayle Linder and Betty Redell, sergeant-at-arms; Sherry Jack­eon and Lisa White, keeper of the archives; Donna Curb and Sarah Goodwyn, music; Janiee And­rews, reporter; and Merle Lucko, room sergeant.

DIAKONOS Diakonos, meaning servant,

provides a meeting time for people who are interested in serving the Lord through mis­sion projects and community work.

Officers this year are Roger Weems, president; correspond· ing seeretary, Debbie Thorn~ and Judy Hutchinson, seeretary. Sponsors are Drs. James Heath and J. A. Reynolds.

ALPBACBI Students at Mary Hardin­

Baylor College who are in the upper 10 per eent of the junior or senior class and show an out­standing serviee at MH-B are eligible for the Alpha Chi. a national scholarship fraternity.

Officers are seniors Donna Drew, president; Sharon Pa­voggi. vice-president; and Car­olyn Ball, secretary-treasurer. Sponsors are Dr. Iva Fussell, Mr. William Harlow and Ms. Rachael La Roe.

ALPHA PSI OMEGA A national dramatic fraternity,

the Alpha Psi Omega was re­activated at Mary Hardin-Baylor College in 1972.

Senior Carolyn Tiee is presi­dent. Junior Mindy Boyd is vice-president and business manager is sophomore Michael Williams.Assistant professor of speech and drama Chuek Taylor is sponsor.

BAPI'IST STUDENT UNION To give every student the

opportunity for a Christian ex­perienee is the aim for the B.S. U. at MH-B •

Officers for this year are senior Norm Kelly, president; sophomore Debbie Richards, secretary; senior Donna Drew, evangelism; sophomores Yolanda Godsey, devotional chairman; Janice Jones, special emphasis; Teresa Gantt, christian life chair­man; junior Sylvia Duckens. music chairman; and seniors Cindy Latham and Debbie Thomas are program chairman and interfaith chairman, respec­tively. Mr. Richard Mangum and Dr. Ted Austin are sponsors.

~--~P.~~~--------------------------~ BAYLOUAN

I Edjtarial ,· I Junior Gayle Lindner is man-~ -- -- aging editor of the Baylorlan.

Club Com.ment Contributing editor Ia senior Nancy Irvin and art editor Is sophomore Denise Smith. Teresa

· McNiel, sophomore, Ia typist. the bells I

Some people see no value in club participation. To them, belonging Mrs. Mary Long, ualatant pro-to structured group reeks of high achoollah fun and pranks. A deeper feasor of English 1a sponsor. look at the club experience may yield some valuable insights Into SOPHOMOaD CLASS their worth. however. -

No experience in which one learn. Ia worthless, and this appUea to The Sophomore officers for the club participation. On an obvious level, there are clubs which are 1978-74 year are Teresa Gantt, structured for a learnlnl purpon, eapeelally the career-oriented president; JenUer Holland, vlce­orpnlutlon. On a deeper level, there Ia the lnal1ht one gain. to one' a president; Diane Parker, aecre­own valuea and alma and leader•hlp capabWtlea-aU 1leaned from the tary; Herb Brubaker, treuurer. interaction vital to involvement. The sophomore apon10n are Mr.

Uaeleu-or a valuable tool which can enhanee the learnln1 WOllam Harlow and Mr. T. E. procau? It II aU ln the handl of the partlelpant. Mercer.

Published weekly at Mary Hardin-Baylor College as part of the student activity. Return postage guaranteed. Entered at the Poat Office In Belton, Texas, as second-class matter under the Act of March 8, 1978.

Edltor~ ••••••••••••••.••••••.•.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.••••••.••••••••• Evelyn Smith Newa Edltor .................................................................... Diane Parker Copy Edltor ........................................................................ Clndy Ortiz Sport1 Edltor.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ••••••• Mike WWiama Photolfapher.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ••• Rlclcy Boalea

1001 m17dle A1d L011 loy. Make Good Readl•g

BY LUCINDA WILCOXEN ........... Addle Prly .,. an ll·year·old

con artlat who quickly ateala Your .heart In the· dellr.htful r'Paper Moon" . br Jot David Brown. ,;;n. . :

The baala for tha . eurrent popuaar , .movie, "Paper Moon" tak11 you on a journer throup the dipnulon )'111'1 with two love,blt · ro1u11. Addle and "Lon1Bor"• who mtJ or m11 not. bt her father, travel throu111 the South·aonnlnl wldowa, aalea eltrk" ·and. anr «Khtr fooll tht)' eom ... ,.,..., :

Acldll 11 qul&t -upabll of ttt­tlnl ~-·;,WI)' .ln an)' Itt of elreum•tanet•· She trflaltntlr takll. un of bilk wooda dtpu•

Uea and Lon1 Boy's romanUe ln\ereata. She Ia an artllt'lt aueh trleka aa lfvlnl a elerk five dollan and walklnl awa)' with ten dollara in ehanp. She and Lon~ Boy aueeeufull)' trtek thl eotton lliciiiiV)' and a WOIUD with 1 loa1lolt panddaqllter.

Part of the eharm or the book Ia due \0 the eharaettrlutlon. You havt no trouble at all vlluall· lln1 Addle and Lon1 Bor ·aa real people, Howevtr, Mr. Brown doe• not IIII'CI" hll minor ehar· aetera. llaeh peraon Addle and Lon18oJ milt Ia aharpl)' dtftMd In rour mind. Anr OM of thtlr vletlm• eould bt rour ntlpw.

Mr. Brown II a muter Mr)'· t.tlltr. He uHhn JOU up In tht exelttment and ldvtnturt from the ftnL ~~~ and 1tav11 )'ou dluppolntltl w~Mtn. thtlr ••r

ha• come to an end. For pure enjoJment iL II hard to beat "Paper Moon."

AI\CKher hllhly entertalnlnl book, alao tht tialla for a eurrent movie, Ia "The Man Who Loved Oat Danelnl'' b7 Mlldrtd Dur· ham. 1t follow• the adventuna of a woman who runa awar from htr huabancl and aeoldtntally be­come• Involved wl\h thrtt out· lawa,

The •torr etntll'l on thtlr Journer u the ludtr, Jar Oro­ltln, atttm~ to ttt hllelilldren front the litdlana. Cat Daneln1 w11 hlllncllln wife who had bttn unfaithful to hi"' and dltd •• a rnult.

Their adventures on the way make enjoyable readln1. They eneounttr Indian., pou~u, rul" pcl terrain aad Md weather. There Ia eomedr and pathoa, but underl)'lnl It aU Ia the ttnalon that buUda u ther run from the law and thtlr put, The endln1la predletable but doea no\ Lake awa)' from the story, · Mildred . Durham also haa 1 talent for eharaeterlution. It. Ia easy to ldtntlfy with the char· aetera •• ther eome ·to find out who \hey Nlll)' an.

For lllht, fut nadlnl there W "The Apple Dumplln1 G1n1" br Jack M. Blrkham, rt~~ntiJ N· ltaatd In 1 paperblek ed"lon.

Sheriff Adam Bricker has pro­blema enourh with the different outlaw ranga hanlinraround hla territory and with a newapaper editor who Ia determined to keep him from belnr reelected. But LheH are nothln1 compared to the problema he encountera when he linda hlmHU In cua\ody of five children whoae father haa deaertad \hem. From 1 boy who

, memorlaea wanted po1Ler1 and capturaa ouUawa to a· llrl that ever)' b)' In town has an e)'e on, Sheriff Bricker has hla hands full. "The Apple Dumplln, Gan1" 11 qulek \0 read, eaa)' to ollow, and humoroua.

All of tht booka In thl1 nvlew ean now be found In lntJptnalve poekeL book edltlona. An)' one of thtm Will llvt )'OU HVtrll Will lptnt houra or enjo)'able Nadlnl•

'·"·!

··.:··

" ''• ,.

' ..

sports

OUT OF BREATH?-Dr. Lewis Hilley and Miss Francis Harless time MH-B athletics as they run the 12 minute endurance run. Photo by Boales.

MH-B A title tics Ti11ed for Endurance TheW omen's Recreational As·

sociation has announced the for· malion of their intramural sports program.

Miss Frances Harless, girls softball coach, will be directing basketball, softball, and folk· dance. Bowling, badminton, and

Sports Briefs

WRA Tht• Mll·BC golf, tennis, and

hnsehllll touros rl\n the 12 minute Aerobics Run Sept. 28.

The course Wl\B measured ex· nctly a. quarter milo as deter· mintld by Dr. Kenneth Cooper, who devised the national endur· nm•o test and set the standards.

BY MICHAEL WILLIAMS volleyball programs will be un­der the direction of Mrs. Barbara Chaney, WRA sponsor.

Gail Lindner, WRA president, said that board meetings are to be on the third Tuesday of each month.

According to these standards an athlete who runs seven laps in 12 minutes, a distance of one and three-quarters mile, is in excel· lent shape, while six laps, a distnnce of one and 1\ half miles, determines tho 1\thletc is in good condition.

For purposes of their own, the MII·BC Athletic Department rRiscd tho stnndRrds and set up the super nthle~c, an athlete who run!j eight lnps or more.

Out of 27 participating athletes 20 ran seven lnps or better. Roijo Tuomola, a momhor of the tennis tonm, was the leader with eight and three-quarter lapa.

Dr. J .. cwls M. Hilley, tennla and golf coach, said that he was

The Outside World CIRCUS

TEMPLE ANNUAL ART f'AIR - Spon·

aorod by the Cultural Art. Con· tor, Oct. 6·7, Bond 0' Tho Rlvor Ranch.

AUSTIN ANNUAL SHRINE CIRCUS -

Oct. 23·28, Auatln Clt.y Coli· aoum.

KILLEEN EXCHANGE CLUB FIVI!l·RING

CIRCUS - Oct.. 28, t.wo per· formancoa, U.S. Hl1hway 190 and 80t.h Street.

"RanR Tho Orum Slowly" -

Capitol Plar.a Cinema. Women11 Film Festival, Oct., 6, Woaley Foundation, 1 to 10 p.m. "Night Watch" • Americana

American Grafittl" · Fox 2 "A Mnn Called Peter" • Var· ally

DAI.LA8 "Joaua Chrlat. Superat.ar" · 4 locn·

tiona. "Jeremy" • Cine I

TEMPLE "Harry In Your Pocket"- Area·

dla.

FAIRS DALLAl

BTATfil FAIR OF TEXAS "The World• Gateway lilxpoal· Uon", Oct. 6·20. Delfina Sat.ur·

MH-BC students are Invited to participate in the sports event of their choice, Mrs. Chaney said. "No team competition is re­quired." For more information, contact Mrs. Chaney, Miss Har· less, or Gail Lindner at Goodman Hall.

very pleased with the results. "It was what we expected. This shows that all our boys are in good shape and have been work· ing out."

Handball MH·BC students interested In

forming a handball team arc asked to contact Dr. Dan Atha in the Health, Recreation and Phy· sica! Education Department of the college.

Dr. Atha, who coached a hand· ball team at Morehead Univer­sity, would like to form a team nnd would need a minimum or four or five players.

Tile HR·PE phone num!Jer Ia 939-5811, ext. 55.

day morning at 10 with tho U.S. Orum and Bugle Corpa, Color Guard and Silent Drill Team from the nation'• capital

leading the downtown parade. All the falr'a entertainment., na tradition, Ia free except for tho play beln1 performed In tho Mualc Hall,

WACO HEART OF TEXAS FAIR II WORLD'S CHAMPIONSHIP

ROO EO - Oot.. 2·'7, Fair· trround admlaalon1 Adulta U8 Children t.21S, Rodeo be1lna nl11hUy at 8 with TV'• Bonanu atar "Little Joe", Michael Lan· don. ThoGtnt Ltdtl Midway Carnival, with 88 rldea and 10 ahowa, will be on tho fair 1(1'ounda.

the bells 4 That Extra Step Will Win - Bragan

By MICHAEL WILLIAMS Taking that extra step can

mean the difference between winning and losing, said Bobby· Bragan. a member of the Fellow· ship of Christian Athletes, speak· ing in chapel Tuesday.

Bragan. who has been mana­ger of four different major league teams. has been President of the Texas Baseball League with eight AA teams since 1969. With humorous anecdotes Bragan drove home points of interest to students and faculty.

Bragan played in the major leagues with the Philadelphia Phillies and Brooklyn Dodgers. In 1945 and 1946 he served in World War II as Second Lieute·

nant in the Infantry. . For the past five years he has····

been in radio with two daily sportscasts and during the off season in 1964-65 was ABC weekend sportscaster. In 1941, Bragan married the former Gwen Best of Birmingham, Ala­bama. and they have two chi!· dren.

Bobby Bragan is Vice Presi­dent of the National Association of Baseball Leagues. In 1970 he was Texas Chairman for the American Cancer· Society and in 1973 he appeared in the Casa Manana production of "Promises, Promises." As an accomplished after dinner speaker, Mr. Bragan is in much demand.

A GiEls Eye View BY SANDY PLANT

Dear Sandy, What exactly does par mean?

Signed, A Beginner

Dear Beginner, In golf, par is the number of

strokes established as an expert score for any given hole or for the whole course. In other words, par is a basis on which to judge performance. If one shoots under par he is a good golfer, over par means he is not as good as the par golfers. Most pros have to shoot par or under.

Yours, Sandy

••• Dear Sandy,

What is a switch hitter? Is he a good hitter'?

Signed, lntoreated

MUSIC Osborne Rrothera, and Don

Bowman.

John Denver In Concert- Oct, 15, 8 p.m., Auatln Municipal Auditorium.

DALLAl. Krla Krlatofleraon In Concert -

Oct, 10, 8 p.m., Moody Ooll· aoum·SMU Campua

"P.D.Q, Rach1 An lilvonln1 of Mualcal Madntaa" - Oct, 6, BMU McFarlin Auditorium, preaented by tho Dallaa Sym· phony Orchoatra. .

"World'• Greateat Pand of Yank

Dear Interested, A switch hitter is a baseball

player who hits both right and left handed. A switch hitter is not necessarily a good hitter. However, he has the advantage of always being opposite the pitcher. Statistics show that a left-handed hitter hits better of a right-handed pitcher, and a right­handed hitter hits better off a left-handed pitcher.

Yours, Sandy

••• Dt!ar Readers,

Thanks to all for warm re· sponse. Perhaps this is an indi· cnt.lon of a growing understand· ing between the spectator and tho athlete.

If you have any questions related to sports, write me:

Sandy Box 337 MH·BC

Lawaon and Bob Haggart'' -Oct.. 9, McFarlin Auditorium, proaonted by tho Dallal Com· munlty Courae.

AUITIN The Merle Hanard Show - Oct..

14, 8 p.m., Auatln Municipal Auditorium. Gueat11 Bonnie Ownea, The Stranpre, The

THEATRE AtJITIN

"A Fun_n)' Thlnl Happened On The Way. to the Forum" -Drama Dept. aerltt at tho Unl· ver1lty of Ttxae, Oat, 8·18 with nightly ~rformanaea ''· 8 In H011 AiadltO..lum,. ... . ; ~

.· . ..- .. :. ,: .. DAl.LA'I ·.,:

"Tho Studen\ Prlnae" - Oci, 11-10 State FalrofTtxaa Mu1lo Hall.

To know him is to love him ...

Cheerleader Jenny Jordan wielded a mean razor on Mark Jones as the cheerleaders gave shaves and haircuts in the Stu­dent Center, Thursday, Oct. 4. Betty Davis, head cheerleader,

said that this is to be a monthly fund raising venture.

Miss Davis said a carnival is also in the offing, probably in the month of November. This will be sponsored by the cheerleaders, Bruin Brigade, bat girls and the baseball team.

a student publication o:f mary hardin-baylor

friday, oct.l2, 1973

Museum Traces MH-B History By J~hn Snyder . chives Committee is curator of ~interviewing persons who have

The learnmg process 1s not the new museum. She has many information about the college. restricted to formal cl~!!Sroom ideas for the expansion of the The men's fraternity has volun· instruction. Perhaps tile most museum. She envisions the tecred to assist her in sorting important part of any education museum growing to the size of and repairing the items in the is gained from the informal the Texas Collection at Baylor museum. experiences of the individual. University. Until the museum obtains the The Sid Richardson Museum, Ms. LaRoe said, "We are just tape history, the visitors must be located on the MH-B campus is getting organized. We have two content to view the artifacts on an ex~ellent source for many rooms full of items that haye yet hand. "Each item has its own "informal experiences." to be sorted and displayed. My little story," said Ms. LaRoe.

Through artifacts located in ultimate goal is to trace the "We have a jewelery box that the museum, visitors are given a complete history of the college bl!longed to Mrs. E. G. Town­nostalgic and informative look at through the artifacts in the send. She emptied it many times MH-B life in years gone by. Most museum. to help students who were in of the items in the museum have "We hope to obtain an oral financial need. We also have an been donated by past graduates history of the college on tape antique love seat and two chairs or persons associated with the similar· to Baylor's. There are from China that should interest college. The two oldest items many people in this area who our oriental students," she said. there are letters written by could provide us with a tremen- Several articles from the Judge Robert E. Baylor to his dous amount of information museum· will be shown on nephew in 1855 and 1867. about the college." Cahty's Corner, a local television

Ms. Rachael LaRoe, dlairman Several members of the his- program, on Nov. 7 at 12:15 p.m. of the MH-B Museum and Ar- tory department faculty have The museum is open each Moo­

Mrs. Nonnand Just Piclring And Grinning agreed to assist Ms. LaRoe in day. Wednesday and Friday organizing the tape history and afternoon from 2,4. p.m.

By Joy Rost immediately after graduation "And now 'gee-tar' lessons.''· from high school, the lack of With golfing, collecting bot- financial means and the appear·

ties, knitting, crocheting, keep- ance on the scene of a certain ing up with six grandchildren, young lab assistant postponed actively serving the Altrusa Club her educational plans until much and the First Baptist Church, later. Mr. and Mrs. Norman.d and performing the duties of were married in 1934. registrar at Mary Hardin-Baylor The Normands moved to College •. :to·: ·k~p ... h.er_\Jusy •• ,.it .. ft4llton ht 1944 froln An)arillo and would seem that Mrs. Ara Lee when their two children started Normand would have not time school, Mrs. Normand got a job for anything else. But each in the business field which lasted Monday and Thursday afternoon 16 years. at 5 she can be found in the college's music building, working for three hours' credit in guitar· playing.

"I can't play anything yet," she clnlms. "My fingers just won't work.''

However, two student assist· ants working In the registrar's officu have nlroady promised to buy tho first two records she cuts.

"Educntlon is for the young at heart," says the a ttrnctlvo hlondo-halred Mrs. Normand. Sho was a gramdmother when her lifelong dream of obtaining a college education wns finally reali;-.ed.

Though she started to college

"When my youngest son fin· ished law school in 1964, I decided to quit my job and go back and finish school.'' Mrs. Normand obtained her Bachelor of Science in Business Admlnls­trntlon from Mary Hardin-Bnylor in 1965.

With the encourngement of the chairman of tho Business Depart· mont at MH-B, she attended Sam Houston State University and got her Master of Business Administration dewee In .1966. That fall she returned to MH·B as a part-time Instructor of business but In November was asked to be full-time registrar nt the college, This Is tho position she now hold11.

"There's never a dull mo­ment," she says about her work. "I'll never forget one interview I had with a prospective student. I asked her what she would do with a degree and she replied quite frankly, 'Hang it on the wall.'"

"But there is always the joy of talking with a student who thinks he is going to be a failure, then succeeds, and I get to hand him his diploma."

"And the people I work with at Mary Hardin-Baylor are just wonderful. They will laugh with you or cry with you."

The Normands live near Lake Belton where Mrs. Normand says she enjoys the quietness nnd buauty. Dut she likes to be around people and become in· volved in their problems and activities.

This vivacious grandmother not only enjoys her work at thu college but nlso hor many outside Interests.

"1 love to talk and drink coffee," she says with n gleam In her eye, "And 1 play n moan game of '42'."

PAST RllFLECTED - Looking glaaa bring• back memorlea,

Shopping At Goodwill Beats The Clothes Game By Doria Prater

Faahlon, What a ral(e. What an expon•lvo ragel

The next time you're In a rage lor fa1hlon and tuflerlnl from tho UIUal ltudent predicament of limited fund• take a trip to your noare•t Goodwill Store.

Goodwill atorea don't elalm to be In the faahlon apotll1ht with Sak'• or Tiffany'• but they do claim low ooata with pod ohanc· -ea of makln1 a real ateal.

The ahopper ahould keep In mind that tlte noatallla era haa returned, That mean• oxlord1,

Cleata, ahlrt.walat dreaMt, at.oek· n11 with weama and juat about

anythlnl that wa• worn twenty year• 110 haa returned to the modern woman'• cloaet after yeara of exile.

Row• of alack• are lrt)', brown, or blue. Black• are plaid. Slack• aro atrlped. Women'•

slacks are anug·llttlnall men's are baggy at Goodwill stores. Warn· lng: slacks don't compare with thoao at Sake but are a cloae aecond. .

Skirtl are numeroua, ahort and long, 1t.ylod for the mid 80'1 and tho early 70'•· Some are made with pleats, a popular atyle thla fall. An oocaaional number In 10lld heather or henna aan be found. Thla would be a 1ood lnvettinent II the atylel1 pleated, Rowlnl, or wrap·around.

Sweater and knit topa are to be avoided. Moat have ann their day• and more. Knit top1, unleaa of I(OQd quality and 1o0d care In the put, will IOH ahape and tlouott with 11e. Don't let lively oolort.bllad your critical examln· atlon.

If by attance you apot a violet aweator or 1ood weave that haa kept Ita ahape and elaatlcl\)'1 buy

it. Thoao button• that adorn tho front opening wore previoualy uaod to preaorve modesty, Now the)' aerve only decorative pur­poaea alnce tho "free aplrt" has been launched.

Gliding to the next aura of color tho ahopper will dlacovor pajama• and night wear. How about a pair of pajama• of feline doalgn? The atyla waa popular In the 801. Could thla have been Indicative of the til'••• aplrlt that men aacuae the emancipated woman of poaaeatlnl'l About 711 cent• will buy the pair. Try It,

llvenln1 pwn• are not too . .,lentllul. The ahopper will won· der why. Alter all, what youn1 lady would want to wear the ume dreaa to two proma In the ume year. A atrlklnlf beauty of pld broaade with fake fur trim oould be found aruahed. be,tweon two llrey red trilla. The ahopper

miKht wonder how many honrt· acho• hnvo followed alnco thla gown whirled acruaa some bRil- . room noor.

Suit• of wool Rnd corduroy might be plentiful but watch lor deacoloratlon of tho latter. Ac· cording to Vogue corduroy Ia the "In" thinK for fnll and wlntor fallhlon. Since ~rico II rractlcall)' nothing, a good ault o corduroy would be worthwhile, However, aulta are aubject to being lncom· plato, Tho caae of the mlaalng huttona will not be aolved In one vlalt to the Goodwill •tore. II the bottom and top are not togother abandon the caae.

The hltth ll1ht of the apree would be found on tho dre•• racka, Who CtOuld real1t tho IJI'a)' wool with red brOGaded trim. Ve•tlp• of royalty I Look al(aln­wrong alae. Finding tho rlerht garment In tho correct alae I• tho

hlgKO&t problem of •hopping at tho Goodwill atorcs.

Could It be po••lhlo thnt ono 11olo dro111 haa oacRptld tho ravag­Ing campaign of band•'l Could It bt> po111iblc that n 1920'• high faahlonnd white Rnd yrllow noworod jOrMllY hal rt>maint>d In tho hnll• of Goodwill without boinK purchaaod'l It'• not prob­able but It'• n Rood example of tho groat variety anti uniqut>ne•• of tho merchnndl1o that cnn bo found only In Goodwill 11tort>a.

Tho real trn~tody of a vlalt to Goodwill would be llndlnat a 66 cent Runolr cro&,tlon ahoddlnK It• fonthor• nnd tho triumph of tho trip would be finding a ma•tor· piece of l(onlua, a creation that haa endured In the atorohou .. e of ml'morlol, a lovoly black nowlnl( l(own with pink aatln ribbon• lor only •1.76, Time nnd mnnt•y would be wttll apt•nt.

news -SGA-

Final plans for Stunt Night were presented by Debbie Stapp and Dorothy Dunn at the Stu­dent Government's regularly scheduled meeting Wednesday at 4 p.m. in the Spiritual Life Center.

Stunt Night will be Oct. 18 and is open to all students, faculty and administration. Cindy Irvin reported on the student director­ies. All members are urged to do their part in getting these out to the students as soon as possible. The November informal · recep­tion was discussed. Talent for

this event will include a singing . group from Ft. Hood. Faculty are invited to this reception. The feasibility of a poll or survey on students' attitudes toward SGA was discussed. Another possibil­ity considered was combining with the BSU's monthly news­letter, the Vine.

Other matters discussed were the Men's Dormitory Constitu­tion, smoking and dress code regulations, and the possibility of beginning a Day Student's Club. Also on the agenda was a proposed inter-dorm council constitution amendment.

the bells 2 Old Cultures Find New Pl,ace

By Diane Parker Red and yellow, black and

white, the chosen theme for the Royal Academia Society's pre­sentation of the 1973 Rhythm and Song, October 4, symbolized the different cultures and lan­guages in today's world as shar­ing together.

Dimming lights, rumbling sounds from the props crew, and · the soft whispers of the waiting audience were all forgotten as Miss Joy Edwards, Mistress of Ceremonies, presented Miss Yolanda Godsey, a Plainview sophomore. Miss Godsey, accom­panied on the guitar by Pedro Trevino, junior, sang two Mexi-

can folk songs, "Ya Callo La Nocbe," and "Solamenta Una Vez."

In tribute to the Bahamas, Miss Rosena Deveaux, sopho­more, sang Exodus, a favorite song in the Bahamas.

A feeling of pride swept over the audience as Miss Linda Glass presented a reading describing her fantacies, as a child, of the American Flag and realization of what it now means in her life.

The ways of the Orient filled the room as Miss Naoko Inoue and Miss Elaine Lee offered Japanese tea to Miss Sherry Emery and Miss Jan Barnes during the Japanese Tea cere-

mony. The amazement shown by Miss Emery as she accepted the small bowl of tea brought joy into the hearts of all who watched.

The on-stage performances ended as Miss Sylvia Duckens, junior, played at the piano and sang some of the old Negro spirituals.

Everyone gathered outside as the Royal Academia Society members, sponsors, and alumna joined hands and said the society songs. Mr. Gerald Dingus lit the burning Royal Academia Society leiters.

Refreshments were served af­terwards in the foyer of the Mabee Student Center.

I. BSU By Betsy Adams

In a deafening ovation by more than 8,000 young people, Andrae Crouch and the Disciples con­tinued the prolonged "Jesus ... Now" performance for an in­spired audience. It all happened at the 1973 Texas Baptist Stu­dent Union Convention.

I Civil War History Enhances Painting I the bells I

Published weekly at Mary Hardin-Baylor College as part of the student activity. Return postage guaranteed. Entered at the Post Office in Belton. Texas, as second-class matter under the Act of March 3, 1973.

Seventy-five MH-B students became a part of the 5,412 young people registered at the 54th Annual Texas Baptist Student Convention, Oct. 5-7. Represent­atives from colleges and univer­sities from all over the state of Texas assembled in Moody Coli­scum on the campus of Southern Methodist University for a two dny happening. A selection of speakers over the two day sem­inar presented the "Jesus ... Now" theme.

Guest speakers presented topics relevant to young people today. Grady Nutt, a professional t•ntertainer, spoke on "Gurus,· WitcheR, and the Rest or Us". Charlt•s Shedd of Texas A&M University was speaker of the Saturday morning session with "II ow to Tell if You Are in Love." Spucial Interest groups met Snturday afternoon In Prospec· Uw Student-to-Student (STS) Workl,rs, Missionary Journey­ml•n, nnd Overseas Career Mls· 1dons (Foreign Mission Board), liS-2 (Homo Minion Board), lnvlncibles, (Texas Vacation Rihlc School Work), River Min· islry Opportunities and Pros· Jlt'Ctlvo Baptist Student Union Olrut•tor•.

By Norman Northen At the next presidential re­

ception host~d by Dr. and Mrs. Parker, first family of Mary Hardin-Baylor College in Belton, be sure and notice the McArdle. The McArdle, the painting which hangs opposite the fireplace in the parlor, is Mary Hardin­Baylor's own historic painting, designed by Texas artist, H. A. McArdle.

The portrait is of Miss Irene McNelly. who was an art student at Baylor College at Indepen­dence. Miss McNelley entered Baylor in 1884 and remained until her death In 1885. A second generation Baylor girl, her mother, Mrs. Carey McNelly Wroe, was a student during the war years, and presented the portrait to the collel{e.

Harry Arthur McArdle, one of Baylor's rlrst art professors, painted the depletion of Miss McNelly In his studio at Inde­pendence, Close examination of the picture will reveal the bell tower at Old Independence In the background.

Except for the one scar In the upper left hand section of the canvas, tho painting has with­stood the vigors of time. By legend, the holo was made by a rlnc slug during the Civil War.

Bringing Out The Charm By Janice AnderiMln

AtudontM nt Mnry Hllrdln·llay· lnr Cnllt•l{l' will lullrn how to ho mort• t•hnrmln~t whon tho ll111· tnrlt-lll Phlln Roriuty pruaonl.ll ltR nnnunl "Chnrm Rr.hool" progrnm 1\urin~t ChiiJllll, Oct. 16.

Tht• t'hllrawtt•rlatlrM of n r.hnrm· in~ JWrMon Will bll diRCUIIIIlld by MrH. Ann l>t•lnny, JlUhllr. ruin· t innH llnd group director for womltn'a wonr Ill Goldatcln·Migcl nf 'l'om~lc, amd Mr. Rob Connally, Mll·B publln rulntlona.

'l'ht• rrol{l'nrn will cloao with th«• llnnnuncom«•nt of Lbo 1973-74 MIMII Charmlnga. SolecLhm• or Mla11 Charming will be by popu· Jar vote. J!llocLions will take plnce Mondny, from 8 a.m. to ft p.m. aL Mnlluo Student Con tor. One Ml11 Chnrmlnlt will bo chaaon from thu untlre aLudont body.

A 11tylo ahow at 8 p.m. Tuoaday In Lho 14llllnn Shelton Thoatro, Mnhou Rtudont Centor, will eon· cludo tho "Charm School", 'l'ho

tht•rnt• "Swout Sca11ons" will bo t•xprt•sRed by n variety of faah· ionH. Mi1111 Cllrolyn Tico will be c•nmmentlltor llnd tlntortnlnmont will lw provided by Dorothy Dunn, Allrn Gondwyn nnd Snndy Wlll'l•lttHR.

Tt•n MludunlR wIll he modeling fnshlon11 from Kny'11 Boutique nnd nurry'K nr 'l'emplo. The mnduiR uro l.llllrll Droachc, rrosh­mnn chui11; 1'h«•roan McNeil, aoph· nmoru ch111; Tt~rrlc Brannon, junior cla1111 D11hble Slm11, aonlor ''"'"": Joy Edwnrds, Royal Aca· dt•mln SncllllYI Rh~trry Oolnnl{er, lliRtorlcnl l,hlla Society; and Rnlly lllnKUI, day atudonLa,

For th11 rlrat tlmo malea will model Lhh1 Y"ar. Modollng for Al11ha Jlhl Omo~ra Ia BoLero Lu· clo. Other modola will bel Crall{ Gold, lnte~rnatlonal atudenta ro· proaontntlvo; and Roljo Tuomola, Jnhnaon llorm.

Admlaalon Ia frell and Lhe pub­liC! IM Invited Lo at.Lond,

Although the story has appeal, it is not authentic. Also, H. A. McArdle who painted the dia­ramas in the Texas ca'pitol, did not come·to Baylor College until the 1880's. He was, however. a member of the Confederate army. The closest possible link to this legend is Miss McNelly's mother, Carey Wroe, who was a student during the war between the states.

Before being bung in the President's home, the portrait bad previously hung on the west wall of Hardy Parlors. In the late 1960's, because the frame was falling apart. the painting was removed and placed in a storage closet. When Dr. and Mrs. Park· er moved into the President's home, the painting was removed from storage. Mrs. Parker neded pictures and furniture to rm the high collings and large walls of their new home. In searching through campus closets, the McArdle was found and the history wns traced. The frame und scar were repaired, without changing the looks of the por· trait, and It was hung In the President's home.

Editor ......................................................................... : ... Evelyn Smith News Editor .................................................................... Diane Parker Copy Editor ........................................................................ Cindy Ortiz Sports Editor ................................................................. Mike Williams Assistant Sports Editor ................................................. Norris Frazier Photographer ................................................................... Ricky Boales Assistant Photographer .................................................... Jan Westfall

Editprial People Are News

A grandmother who plays the college family. The Bells believes guitar? A fellow student who has whole-heartedly in this state­. had her poetry publislled? ~~e .. _me,~t. and ~his. feature series is editor of the Houston Post went designed to i-einind the reader HERE? Wow. Dorothy must that people are the biggest news really dig kids. These comments story ever. have been heard as a result or the There are people on this cam­feature series recently begun by pus who are doing things, going The Bells. . places. They are faculty and .

Another questaon that bas administrators, as well as stu· been heard: Why these people? dents. They are a baseball team Aro they news? The answer is who has brought new recognition yes. to Mary Hardin-Baylor, as well

Whon students come to Mary as a student nurac who cries Hardin-Baylor, one or the biggest when she has to leave that cute soiling points is the "one-to-one little boy on Pediatrics. confrontation" concept, the idea that at MH-BC every student is Look around. Appreciate the an Individual, a member of the people who populate your world.

Kaleidoscope TUE DRAMA DEPART· For further Information con· For convenience, tho claaaea will

MENT or Mary Hardin-Baylor corning specific reaearch oppor· be preaonted in two location• at College, under the direction of tunltlea and application materials the aame time, Mr. Chuck Taylor will present a arc available from tho Aaaocla· Tho location for Belton real· program during Chapel, Oct. 28. tcahlp Office, JH 606-P, National dent11 will be at tho Mll·B cam·

'l'he program will Include a Rcacarch Council, 2101 Constl· pualn room 213 at Well• Science piny cntltlod, "A Cup of Trem· tutlon Avenue, N. W. Waahlng· Hall and the Memorial Baptlat. bllng." ton, D.C. 20418. Church at the corner of Avenue

THE SPANISH CLUB will THE CLOSING DATE for Hand 18 8tr11ot In Temple will be 11pommr n car wash Saturday submlsalon of manuacrlpta for the location for Temple real· from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. behind the "College Student'• l,ootry dents. Gottya Dorm. Anthology" Ia Nov. 15, Ch\11ea will concern the know·

The chnrgo will bo .1.150 and lcdgo and undoratandlns of pros· proccoda will go to tho club for a Junior or aenlor college stu· nancy. Enrollment will bo limited. bnnquol achodulod for Nov. 3. dents are ollglblo to aubmit hla To r11glater, call 939·158ll, exton·

THE KUDER VOCATIONAL vcno, Thcao Ia nn limitation aa alori 78 In Bolton and leave your tNTERES'l' StJRVEY and tho to rnrm or thorne although, nno and th11 number or peraon• Otlll Qulck-Scorlnlt Montnl Ablll· Rhnrter worka are preferred bo· comlnlf. tieR Scnlu will he offorod to CRUIO or IJIRCO llmiLatlona. Each FINAL PREPARATIONS rro11hmon and toaohor oducaUon poom mu•t bo typed or printed wore mPde for tho Student Gov· aLudenLa who hnvo not previous- on 11 separate shoot or paper, and crnmont Talont Show at 4 p.m. ly Lok11n tho teaL OcL. 28, bllJrln· hear tho namo and home addreaa Wodnoaday nt tho Spiritual Life nlnK at Ba.m. Rt 8!30 p.m. OcL, 24 of tho atudont, and tho college Centllr, In Room 111 at Wella 8clonc11 nddroaa 11 well. Studonta, faculty and admlnl· Hall. Munuacrlpta ahould be aent to atratlon are ur1od to part.lalpate

RESEARCH ASSOCJA'l'E· tho Ofnct Of The Proaa National In tho tradltlonalahow aeheduled SHIP PROGRAMS for 1974 have Poetry Proaa, 8110 Solbr. Avo· for Oct. 18, boon announced by tho National nuo, Loa An1lea, Callforn a, 800· Other mattora dlacuHd were Reaoarch Council, 84. tho men'• dormltor)' aonatltu·

Thuae proltl'ama provide lclon· THIC DEPARTMENT OF Lion, amokln1 and dreaa code tlata and 11n1lneera with oppor· NURSING at Mary Hardln·Bay· replatlona, an Informal rteep· tuniLioa for prodoatoral reaearah lor College will conduct prenatal Lion In Nov, and thtt poatlblllty In ehomlatry, apace, uro, atmo- claaae• for expect.ant parenta. of beiJinnlnl a Day Student'• 1hhorlo and earth acloncea, ph)'· Tho cla11ea will be ovary Camp. Al10 on the apnda waa 1 alca, on~tlnoorlnl, and mathe· Tuoaday evenln1 durln1 Oct. 18 propoaed lntor·dorm aounall eon· matlca. and Nov.IO from 'I p.m. to 8 p.m. atltutlon amendment,

The Mind Of A Child •

A Beautiful Thing

3

\

By Janet Seott A large playground on a rainy afternoon ..

. Children eating popsicles and jumping rope . • • A woman with a smile on h~r face .•. MH·B Senior Dorothy Gale Dunn is doing her student teaching at Southwest Elementary in Belton. "I grew up in a family of educators so I learned early the importance of a stable beginning and a good education for a child," said Ms. Dunn. '

Standing next to her a little boy inquires, "Miss Dunn, who is that man with that thing'l Is he a giant?" Running toward her teacher, the class tattler is yelling, ''Teacher! He is saying thoae BAD words again!"

Calmly reassuring her that she would apeak to him Ms. Dunn said, "The mind of a child i1 a beautiful thing, It Is very exciting to see that mind belng developed."

With the aid of her advising teacher, Mrs. Dorothy Vltels, and 28 inquialtive little people, Dorothy Gale Dunn is doing that very thing, .

ljjiti~M~ ~l~~~~~t,~:;~ :jiWJ~\~~~\1 \I~~~~~~J". . • I • .'. l : ~ ' ' ) •' 'I

•" :'.\

OUT!

A Girls Eye View \

BY SANDY PLANT

Dear Sandy, What is "batting average"'!

How do you figure a batting average•!

A Bruin Fan

Dtmr Rruin Fan, A balling average is an indi­

t·ation nf a players hitting pro· fil'i<•ncy.lt is determined by divi· ding thl~ limes at bat into the numbt•r of hits. By the way any playt•r who hits .333 is a GOOD hiller.

Yours, Sandy

Tll'ar ·Randy, What nrt!US nr dnssificntion do

t lw MII·BC Bruins compete in, Slll'h as in high st•hool it is A, AA, AAA. m· AAAA'! How nrc we t•lassi fil'tl as a t•nllt•gt• bus<~ hall ll·am'!

llt•al' l-'nn. Tlw Mll-IIC lkuins nrt• u hast!·

hall•·luh. Tlwy lll'l' nnt affilial.llcl with tlw NCAA, NAJA, m· un.v

other ainateur league. This is the reason, our ex-pros are eligible to play. The Bruins play "all comers" and are seeking to esta­blish themselves as a club known for excellence in both perfor­mance and teaching~

Yours, Sandy

Dear Sandy, Does MH-BC have a handball

team'!

Interested

Dear Interested, Y cs, it. is in the process of

being organized right. now. If you ure intllrcst.ed in participating, t•nntnct Dr. Atha at the gym.

Your11, Sandy

• • • If ynu have any IJUllstions,

writ<•: Sundy Box 337 MH·BC

The Outside World Uy Jane Mllmn

circus AUR'l'lN- Oct. 23·28, Shrine

Ch'<!UK, Municipal Auditorium, S2.1i0 tn $4.00.

Kll ,J,EF.N- Oct. 25, Canon nntl llnrnos Ji'lvt• Ring OlrtlUa, llwy. 1~0 nnd :lOth St.

fairs J)AU~AS- Oct, 6·21, Bt.atll

Fnlr or Toxna, Fnlr Jlnrk, •1 .ISO nnd 7B ct1nt.M chlldron.

cinema ll~I~TON- "111tlor, Tho ~IUt

Ton 1lnya" nnrl "Fonr 1• ·Thtt K•w", llc,ltonlnn.

COPI'ImAS COV1!1- "Tho Unml nncl 1'hc• Ooorl", Clnc1ma.

KlJ,I.J<~F.N- "Tho Gotnwny"m Cltwmn 1. "l,lft• and TimoR of Julll(o Uny Bonn", Clnoma Pln:t'.n 1. "Thll Pnsoldon Advonturo", Chwmn Pl111.11 ll.

'rNMPI.E- "Eloctrn Glide In Ulut•", Arcndhl. "Wickod Wick· t•d" nnd "HouMo of llnrk Shn· dnwH", Tuxn11.

mQsic 'AUSTIN- Oct. 14, Morlo Hatr·

gnrd, Municipal Auditorium, 7 p.m., •4 to $6. Oct. 17, Holen lturldy, Municipal Audltofllum, 8 p.m. Oct. 24, Earl ScrUKK• Ro· vlt•w, Municipal Auditorium. Oct.. 28, ,Jnmoa Prawn, Municipal Au· dltorlum, 8t45 p.m.

Ot\U.AR- Oct. 14, John Don· vc•t•, RMU Moody Col11oum, 8 p.m. Or.t. 1ft, Plllln• Civic Bym· phony, McFnrlln Auditorium, M: tn I'·"'· Oct, 20, Guy Lnmhnrdn,

=n"flZ'ttnrmwt77

TJC By Mike Williams and Norris Frazier

The TJC Leopards won over the MH-BC Bruinns 4-2 Tuesday night. in a benefit. game on the MH-BC ballpark.

At the end of one inning of play the score was tied 2-2. TJC scored two runs in the second inning to bring ttie score up to 4-2 where it remained for _the re­mainder of the game.

The benefit game was played in order to help raise money for the Belton Marching 100, the only band selected to represent Texas in the annual Rose Bowl Parade.

The Volleyball Sports Club will meet each Tuesday evening at 6:30 in Goodman Gym. Students who WIJUid like to play volleyball are invited to come. For more information contact Miss Frances Harless, volleyball coach, at Goodman Gym.

The Womens Recreational Activities is sponsoring the annual "Play Day", activities on the MHB-C campus at 12:15 p.m. on Oct. 27.

the bells 4 -4 MH-BC • 2

The MH-BC Bruin baseball team lost a 5-3 error plagued game Tues., Oct. 2, to the Pirates of Southwestern University at Georgetown.

In the first inning the Pirate took a 2-0 lead; with a man on first base, the next batter doub­led moving the man on first to third, the Pirates got another base hit which scored the run­ners on second and third.

A Bruin error in the second iining allowed the Pirates to in­crease their lead to three runs.

Mark Williams hit a home run in the third inning to get the Bruins on the scoreboard. But on

Sports Briefs Some examples of the "Play

Day" events are, a pie eating contest, a tug of war, diving for pennies in a pool, and many others.

The activities get under way at Hardy Hall, and proceed outside to the middle of the campus, and on to Goodman Gym. .

All MHB-C students are invit­ed by the WRA to participate in

still another Bruin error iri the third inning, the Pirates scored again increasing their lead to a score of 4-1.

The Bruins scored in the fourth inning on a homer by Ray Court to make the score 4-2 Pirates.

Neither team scored again until the eighth inning, when the Pirates took advantage of ano­ther Bruin error to make the score 5-2 Pirates.

The Bruins scored in the ninth inning, but the Pirates won the game with. the final score of 5-3 Pirates.

the events. For more information contact Gayle Linderer, W .R.A. president, at Goodman Gym.

Tryouts for the intercollegiate bowling team will be during the week of October 15-19 at Goodman Gym. Miss Frances Harless, bowling coach said, "anyone who wants to try out for the team must sign up at Goodman Gym before the dead­line at 4 p.m. on October 16".

Joh1so1 Dormitory Diredors Busy life Style Accompa1ies

By Janet Seott A wife, a husband and two

small children playing ... Sounds like a typical All-American family. But there is nothing typical about Jim and Sandy Plant.. The Plants are dorm parents at Johnson Residence Hall on the MH-BC Campus.

Amid toys, sports equipment, house plants, books, and two lively children, Tina and Jamcy, th<~ Plants seem perfectly at omw. How docs n young mother ncljust to n world surrounded by m<m'l "I like it. Ronlly. Jim hns alwnys been n man's man and I nm used tn being nrouncl. All the I{Uys in the dorm nrc just. grcnt,'' snid Sandy.

M<~Fnrlln Auditorium, 8 p.m., $4 tn $6. Oct. 29, Krls Krlstofforaon, RMU Mnody Coliseum, 8 p.m. Ot!t, 21, 'l'hruo Dol{ NIKhL, Dallas Cnnvt•ntlnn Center, 8 p.m.

theatre AUSTIN- Oct. 12·19, "A Fun·

ny Thing Happened on tho Way to tho Forum", Unlvoulty of Toxn• Major Sorlo1, Iingg Audl· tnrlum, •2.110 and .1.ft0 aLudonta. Oct. 17·20, "A Streetcar Namod lloalrl''\ Prama Lab Theatre, liT, •1 OA~I~AB- Oct. 12·21, "Btu·

dont l'rlnco", SLate Fair of Toxaa Mu•lc Hall, 12 to 19, Oct. 12·81, "ltndrlnn Vll", Dalla• Theator Contor; .8.211 to til.

GEORGETOWN- Oct, 111·18, "Ar•onlc.and Old Laco", Goorgo· town Community Thoator Com· JNIO)', .2.

Jim and Sandy met while · attending Blinn College and married soon after. In the six years they have been married they have moved 18 times.

Sandy, in addition to sharing 50 percent of the dorm respon­sibilities, is taking nine hours of classes and is a secondary hos· tess for Gettys Dormitory two nights a week, sponsor of the Cheerleaders, the Bruin Brigade, nnd t.he Batglrls. Sandy also writes 11 weekly column for The Bolls.

Jim, 11 physical education m11jor who plnys t.hlrd bnsc for t.ho MH-IlC Bruins, comes to MH·IlC after five years with tho

New York Mets and one year with the Minnesota Twins. Plant is very excited about the oppor· tunlty to continue his education.

"I called Red Murff and he said I could go to school and play ball at the same time," he said. "This Is exactly what I needed because I am getting personalexperlence in coaching and a degree.

"Our program has a great. futuro because the Bruins nrc a talented team. The only thing holding us back is defense and we nrc working on tbnt. In the meantime I can go to school, play baseball, nnd still support my family. What more could Sandy nnd I ask for'l''

Student Prince Is Sentimental Shaw By Michael William•

"Th11 Student Prince" Ia now playlnK nt tho now Music Hall through Oct. 21, at tho Btat.o Fair In Dalla•. It Ia a warm production with n aontlmont.al and beautiful mu1lcal acoro.

Sigmund Romborg'• work orl· glnally o:ronod on Broadway In 1924 nn became tho lon~ro•t running mu•lcal In New York hl•tory-608 porformancea.

review Thoro Ia not a alnslo aonft that

Ia not. apt to capture tho aten· or'a hoart, Such 10n1• 111 "The Orlnkl01r Sonr", "DeeD ln My Hoart", "Golden Oa)'a\•, "Sere· nado", and "To The Inn We're MarchlnR" have been recorded . nnd performed from Amerlaa to Japnn, from South Africa to Au•trnlln. Tho ahnw lt.aelf Ia now hondod for Ita fourth Broadway oponlnK·

It was rlrst rovlvod In 1991 In Now York and again In 1948, both tlmoa a lJI'Otlt IUCClOII,

Tho style of tho production 11 nuthentlc 1920'• navor but tho hlatory of"Tho Student Prince" which •tar• Harry Danner In tho tltlo rolo, Ponnlo Hamilton aa hla •woeLhonrt, Goorse Ro10 a1 Lut•, and RoborL Rounaovlllo a• Or, Engol, goea a lot further back than 1924.

lt. wa1 flr•t publlahed •• a •hort •Lnr)' In 1811, In UMU, a •Lap veralon waa a pea~ .hit In Dorlln, and ahorUy thereafter played alx month.• In New York. Poople nocked to IH tl'le ahow which waa done In German. From 1908 to 1808, It waa a vthlcle from tho peateat American aa· tor of t.ha~ t.lmo, Rlohard Mana· field, In t.he Bln1ll•h voralon. .

A produatlon well worth the Lime It takeHn travel to Dalla• to 100 a walt• thoae who take It In while at the State Fair.

( i· r -- ___J

Theresa MeNeD SaUy Dingus

. ~- ~!~~~~t publication _: :::~!~.::_~fy-~~a-i:'~! n ~b~~Jor

:-= --_7":trtaav-:·~=oot;.: .• o--._oTs .. -- . . . '117 ' - . - , . -----·--- ---···-- -·. ·---#

. Mis$. Ch•r ... IPI .. Cont.,st Sponsore~ By Hi$torical Phila By Dlaaie PUker· . . -: _____________ ~-_.:

What· ~s cha~m? ~his question.: peop_fe:~a~py-;::~hat real charm is was ans_wered fo:r:many people .~:..:.was· .. probably··. decided by stu­when Mrl!_;:!fJl~Y:.t~l!~i:Sponsor or ·-dents:B!I they voted (or the Miss Historlc_!lJ_: P..h!la:S~iety, con due- -CllarmingiJ oUheir choice Mon· ted a pa"J!el:~ussion during the . day in: the Mabee Student Cen-chapel·program Tuesday. ter. . .

To sc)fue-:"people charm is beau· _ ~ .. · . ty/al)~·.ili!r:to others it is giving Receiv~n·r the title of 1973~~4

'~" ., ~· . , .or·on~I'<Jniler :.aetf\to~maktH)ther. ,. '·Ali·College ·' ·Miils · Charming •s

Rainbows Cover Sky For MH~BC Fresh•an By Clady Ortl& Ral~bow colors gleamed Cor

tho ."Rainbow class of 1977" at tho Freshman Reception Oct. 13 at Hardy Hall.

The theme, "Color Our World" was carried through tho formal occasion. Mistresses of ceremony were juniors Donna Curb and Lisa White. Freshman Clau President Andl Alvarado gave tho welcome and the Invocation was presented by Dr. Bobby Parker, president of Mary Har· dln·Daylor College.

Mtur dinner, entertainment wn11 provided by junlori Gayle l.lndnur, Vonnie Hopklna, Janice Ancircws, Sylvia Duckona, and frcshmnn Barbara Nou"\an., .. , .

Onu of tho highlight• of the ovoninK wa11 the unification of thu rroahmnn nnd junior claaaea. Reproanntlntt tho two cla11~1 In the candlelllfhtlnJr ceremony were tho cia•• proaldonta.

'rh11 hhchllght of tho foatlvo UC!I!IINion w111 th11 nnmin11 of "Re· pre11untntlvo Froahmon" and "Moat Roproaentatlvo Froth· man", Receiving tho honor• of "RollrcaontnUvtl Fro11hmen" were Kim FraKior, Sharon Lowla, Olano DoleKol and Dobbie HLapp .Janet Scott wa• namod "Moat Ropreaontnt.lve Fro•hman." A poom written for tho ooea·

alon hy Gayle J,lndner road1 t•erhnp• many year• from

thl• eandlellt. momont.

'

Past friends, singing separ· ato songs we shall touch hands again.

Then we shall laugh at this day for having thought that Tomorrows wore only strands that' hold us as one for today, For you have colored our world .•• With the end of Initiation,

freshmen were permitted to ro· movo their beanies, aymbollalng that they hllvo become a true part of tho college family. As part of that family tho "Rainbow claas" of 1977 will certainly color Mllry Hardin-Baylor College In tho future.

. stidents BooKie ,,,II.•

at0APO Dance ·.~.. . ..

Mn~y . Harciln·Baylor College student• 11nd others wero enter· tnlned with 11 dance Oct. 13, •JlflniOrod by tho Alpha Phi Omega.

Th~t dnnco waa at tho Amerl· 1111n J,oglon Hallin Bol~on. Mu11lc wa• prnvldod by ·tho "Sput Nix", from Auat.ln,

Tho l(1'oup of throe men and one woman played alow mualc 11uch aa "Bohlnd Oloaed Door•" nnd tho papular "Smoke On tho Water",

Miss Carolyn Tice, a senior from Emphasizing the new fall fash· hie Sims, senior class represen­El Paso. Also chosen to repre- Ions, the Historical Phila Society tntive; and Sherry Balenger, re­sent her class as 1973-74 senior presented their annual Style presenting Historical Phila So­class Miss· Charming was Miss Show at. 8 p.m. Tuesday .in the ciety. Betty "Reddell. Miss ReddeU is. a Shelton theatre. Miss Carolyn One of the new highlights of ·senior from Belton. The. _junior Tico, a senior communications the annual style show this year class chose Miss Jennifer-Jordan .. major from El Paso, s~r\l~:,.s·. was .the addition.~ or. men's fall as the:ir.J973·74 Miss Chiirm(ng. .c:ommentator for the p~~li'r~RI,1-:',.;:rallhlons · to .. t.M·:.program; Mr. Miss Jordan Is a junior. from . T~~. t,~.e!'le ~~~~.eet. Seasons" Sotero .. ~~~(o, r!!p,resenting AI­Houston. The sophomores .decl· w.a.s· no~~~-~~- .. Miss Terrie Bran· pha Omega"Fraternity; and Mr. dod on three Miss Charming& to non, representing tho junior Crnlg Gold. representing the represent their class. They are class; Miss Joy Edwards, repre· Men'R Dormitory, modeled these Miss Lanu Bunch, a sophomore senting Royal Academia Society; ·raRhions. from Austin; Miss Teresa Gantt, and Miss Sally Dingus, repre- Miss Nancy Irvin, president of a sophomore from Hutto; and sontlng the Commuter Students, Historical Phlla Society, presen­Miss Theresa McNeil, a sopho· modeled some of the now fall ted each of the 1973-74 Miss more from Waco. Tho 1973-74 casual wear. CharmingR with red roses. Freshman class Miss Charming Is Others modeling after· five Recognition goes to Mrs. Kay Miss Laura Drosche from Rose· evening apparel for the fall JohnRon of Kay's Fashion Bou­bud. season were: Miss Laura Dro· liiJUO and Gary Tompkins of

Tho Miss ·Charming contest Rcho, Freshman Class Represen- Aarry'R of Temple for providing was sponsored by Hlstorial Phlla tatlve; Theresa McNeil, Sopho· tho Full Fashions for the 1973-74 Society. more class representative; Deb- Historical Phlla Style Show.

'··

news Professors Teach The Way ...

By John Snider Dr. Jim Heath, Assistant Pro­

fl•ssor of Religion at MH-B, be­lieves that to be intellectually informed, the twentieth century citi;-.cn must have an under­st.lnding of the Bible.

Dr. Heath said, "Our culture is becoming more Biblically illiter­al«•. Religion courses expose the stml«•nt to the Bible and promote :r general understanding of it.

"I believe that our religion courses accomplish more than t h•· fulfillment of a degree re­•tuirl'mcnt. They help the stu­dt•nt to become more informed ahnut. the Bible and to become mnrt~ •~onversant with it.

"A study of the Bible does uway with many false concep­tinns about the Bible, once the studt•nl finds out what the Bible is rt•nlly ;1bout. The Bible also provides mnny answers to pro­bl«•ms em·ountered in life. Through the Bible, the students g:1in :1 better understanding of God. themselves, and the rela­tion tx•tween God and man.

"Any academic study of the

By Joy Host "lit• t•u rt•s . . . " Cnmm1•nts such as this one are

nftc•n mudt! about Gerald D. Din· gus, ussot'intt• professor of l•'rt•m•h at Mnry Hardin-Baylor Collt•gt•, by students on the col· h•gt• t•nmpus. "No matter how husy ht• is, hl• ulways has time to tnlk to ynu," om• of his former sturh•nts snid.

Dingus •~umt• to the college l'il{ht yt•nrs ago. Rinre then he has nut nnly lwt•n involved in 1 ••m·hinl{ st udt•nts but ha11 spon· snrt•rl varinus dubs and orguni· znllnns nn c•nmpuP. Curn•nt.ly, he is spnnsnr nf t ht• Hnynl At•udemiu Scwh·l~· ami Alpha Mu Gumma, llw hnnnrnry fnrt•ign lnnguagt• scwh•ly on c•umpus.

1\ nul ivl' nf Cnmum•hc•, Tt•x., llingus l{ratluul«•d from 1-~ust Tt•x as Kin I«• llnivc•rsily und Kt•rvl•d In 1lw tlnil••d Hlnii'K Air Fort•o, Mnslnfhis wurk in lht• Air Fm·•~•• wns in llw fh•ld nf Nluc•utionul adminisll'nl inn.

lly UoriN l•rater Wlwn nn I hn I mid Or•tnlwr morn

Ill' dnt h sit nntl 1unil«' nnd tl•ll or Mll·ll, nnturc•'ll t•r••nhlrt•ll,

nnd 11 myth nnll'h worn llut llllllllllnril'.l's with 11turh•ntry fnr pnHsihlt• print In tht• flt•lluR,

Nnlur~•'11 t•rt•nturt•llnnrl n myth llHII'h wnrn-hnw dm•11 t.hnt fit. llfl• nt Mll·ll'! II dnc,Rn't, but It clm•ll rt•lnh• tntlw llrt• or Wllllnm IIIII mnr·h••r, IIIIHOI'IIIh' profl'IIOr nf l·~ngliMh.

M1•, llutmnt•ht•r, who hn• IIIIIKhl ror 27 yonr1, hn11 II trUI.l rh•vntlnn t.n "nlmnla or thll wild. II•• lwlh•vt•M hn 11hould not. bo ro· Kl\rdl•d n11 wolrrl uvon though ho hl\a hnd auch boarder• u 'coona, Npldt,rM, klnli' •nnkoa and •kunka,

Bt•KinnlnM hh1 tu•cond ytlar or lnNlrurllnn 111 MH·R, ho h11• NllOl'IRI nrroet.lon ror akunka. "Tiwy mnkt' wnndorrul pet.a If

Bible may produce a basis for spiritual growth. The students find themselves becoming more involved. The more a student learns about it, the more they want to know."

In response to the question, 'To what extent are you con­cerned with leaching religion as history versus witnessing', Heath replied, "I cannot teach religion as simply history for it is :1 w:ty of life with me. My Christ­i:m beliefs influence the way I present my subject.

"It is impossible to make a rigid separation between the Bible as a way of life and as academic subject matter. The in­structor has to be very careful. It is wrong to make the classroom just another preaching service.

"In my way of thinking, it is not ppssible to teach history, English, sociology or religion in a 100 per cent objective manner. Every instructor has presuppo­.sitions that affect the way he presents the subject."

Dr. Heath believes that some of the strongpoints of todays

youth are their questioning minds and their eagerness to seek the truth. He also cited their idealism, (eg. The ideal of no war which is prevalant in this generation.) as being ~ery worth­while.

"My deepest concern deals with the area of absolute truth. It disturbs me that there seems to be a dangerous school of thought today that no one way is better than another, or that all truth is relative. It was in this type at­mosphere or relativism that Hit­ler gained control of Germany. The people of Germany had no firm convictions on absolute truth." said Heath.

Dr. Heath described his for­eign non-Baptist students as being open minded concerning his religion courses. He sees them as being eager to learn about the Christian views and tolerant of them.

Dr. Heath's goal as a religion instructor is to "get the students excited about the Bible." "If I can a~~omplish that, my .Job wiU be largely fulfilled," he said.

• . Le Mot. • He was awarded .an M.A.

dcgrt•e from East Texas State In 19tH and did further graduate work at Colorado State Univer­sity in 1964 and at the University of Rt•nnes in France .in 1966.

Dingus is presently working townrd n J»h.D. in higher educa· lion nt The University of Texas. lit• is due to receive it in Decem­ht•r 1974 or early 1975. "A lot of it dt•1wnds on how long it takes me In do my di11sortation," he said, "nnd you know how that goes."

Dingu11 i11 not only interested in lht• teaching and guidance of young pt•oplc but hall several hnhhi1•s, tno.

"I 11nmt•timo11 rais11 tropicnl fish-whun I hnve lime. I hnve a hnm rndio stntinn which I hardly c•vt•r hnvt• time to use." He also HWnH n 1111ilhont. which he takus nul nn I.nkt• Belton occaRionally.

Jlinl{ll!l if; nn llt'tiVe member or tlw fo'irMI Bnplist Church in Htll Inn nntl slng11 rirat tt•nor in two

quartets. He is a member of the Belton Lions Club and in national vice-president of Alpha Mu Gam-ma.

Dingus married the former Ann Brooks while they were both in college. They have four children: Sally, 17, a freshman at Mary Hardin·Baylor; Carrie, 15; Virginia, 14; and Brooks, 12. Mrs. Dingus teaches first grade at Leon Heights Elementary School in Belton and is doing graduate work at The University of Texas.

The short, red-bearded, blue­t•yed Dingus says he favors a smnll college atmosphere where I'Vcrybody knows everybody t•lsu. He is nlso 11 dedicated liberal nrts cducntion 11dvocato. "We arc gc•tting nwny rrom tho small lilwrnlnrts collugo in our present scwit•t.y, but there is 11till a place ror it In tho cducntional scheme."

"H'11 hnrd to convince people tlwy nu11d Illiberal arts education if tht•y can't. 'Nell' it.," Dingus said:

• . The Style ~·c111 rin nnt nltur thll course or nnturt•," Mr. llutmlu•hur in11lst.cd, "nnrl t lwy'w nlwnya hoon very c•hnrltnhlu townrd nw,"

llnlrlln~ dugruua from Howard l'n,vm• llniv••r11ity nnd the Unl· Vl'rMity nr JIOUII\.On, hu say& tho pnpulnr lwllt•r thnt grown 11kunks, un1h•r ordlnnry circum· "tn 111'1'11, 11 rt• dn ngurouN, Ia n lllyl.h." lit• t•onllmw• to omphn· lil~.t· lhnt mnn'11 hlnck nnd whlt.c l'nmpnnlon nr the wooda, rtold•, nnd rnnrl11 u"''" Ita doronsoa only whtlll rrlght.onod or !.liken by MUrtlriM•'· lie Ia convinced that n Nkunk rnlsud from lnfuncy to ndulthood with no mlatreatmont mukt•a 11 wonderful pot.

Mr. Hut.m11cher hna hnd two rnmllh•1 of 11kunk1 Rll I{Ueltlln hl1 homt•. Ho doaconted tho lint KrtlUJl, II tnsk he RIIUrel I• anre nnd 11lmplo. ltll decided tho per· Ronnllly chanl(o Will too arrent nnd fllunnod not to lnterlero with

nnturt' in the ruturo. Fumlly · numht'r two l!onslst or one skunk whlt•h hnH heun corrected for naughty hohnvlor with no re· Krt•Uul 11rturmuth and hns been rt•wnrdod with klndno111 for 11.1 nhmt It• nrc,

On 11 moru serloua subject, Mr. llutmnchcr enjoy11 bolnK nt MH-n hocnuso he Ia nt homo on tht• cnmpus. Artor tenchlng nt 'l'oxn• 'l'och, Arknnsna Tech, nnd Gulf Cna•t Rlhle Colle~re In ltoua· ton ho •ny• that ho onjoya hla work hcrtl bt•cauae or the "free· dnm to do what you want to aid lltUdllnts nnd thl• Is tho thinK thnt. •hould bo dono,"

Rutmncher relora to colleJCe llf•• na n time to roup "compe· toney In II choaon aroa or pro­ftllllonnl endeavor and pononnl rraponalhlllty alonar_ aide a work· nhiP _phllnaophr.," He commend• Mlf·R ror It• I ltudontry."

&It hh till .llhllll411JIIklillh

the bells 2

Dr.Heatla COncerned Witli ·Truth

Perspective _On ·chapel By M,.i-ta ~ > · . . t.ian's goal, is to "live as God

Typical statements such as, wants you to live." "Now that its chapel time, ·I can She also urged everyone to take a good nap." were being "let BSU touch your life" because muttered as Miss Raye Nell Dyer of the strong Christian fellowship approached the platform in cha· that abides in it. Miss Dyer be­pel two chapel services ago. But lieves that faith should be a before chapel had come to a growing and continuous process close, the student·to·student and should be ·shared with worker from Texas A&M ·was to others. · , , · · . have either chaUenged or in· "Ir your relationship with spired both the skeptical student God," she went on to say, "is not and the devoted Christian. growing and seeking his will in a

"What we're here for Is to day to day way, then you are share Christ," said Miss Dyer, missing out ori the greatest bles· who has been devoting this year sing of life." Miss Raye Nell Dyer of her ure to sharing Christ with remained on campus through students on various college cam· Thursday night to teach, help, pusos. Her goal. which she be· · and ·train Interested students to lievos should be Chris· share Christ. ·

I the bell" I Publlahed wnkly at Mar)' Hardln·BI)'Ior Oollep 11 part of the

1tudent activit)'. Return poatlp paranteed, lnterecl at the Poat Olllce In Delton, Texaa, •• •econd·clua matter under the Act of March 8, lt'78, IDdi\Or •• ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,lvelrn Smith New• lldltor .................................................................. ~.Diant Parker Cop)' mdlt,or,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,Cind, Ortll Sport• IDdltor ........ , ... ,, .. ·.,,,, ....... , .... , ... , ... , .............. , ........ Mikt William• Aulatlnt Sport• ldltor """"'""'"""""'""'""'"""'""'"Norrla Praaler Phot.opapher,,,,,, .. ,, ......................................................... RiekJ Boll•• Aulatant Photoll'apher,,,,,,,,.,,.,,,,.,,,,,,.,,,,,,,.,,,,,,..,.,~an Weatfall

21 u::uma:uauc au Hiihh.if

comment the bells 3 Bslfs BIJIJk Review

The- Outside World ··.:.

J1st Give Me·.-A Cool- Drink Of Water Before I Die

·-·· Maya · Angelou

BBI/'s Mu Rwiwl

:\ ......

~~~ / ·-·-·~ ... v

By Andrea llardiDg

Maya Angelou is a young, talented writer-actress who very articulately expresses her Black­ness through her writing. In 1971, she copywrited a collection of her poems. In Just Give Me a Cool Drink of Wate'r . . . fore I Diie", Maya Angelou divides and expresses her feelings in two parts of her book.

In Part One, "Where Love Is a Scream of Anguish," Ms. Ange­lou goes to great length to des­cribe what different people think of as their lifetime love. She talks about bow a love ends iri the fall of the year, and bow lonely a borne becomes after a couple part. In the poem, To A Hus­band, Ms. Angelou expresses the feelings of a Black woman as she describes her husband:

Your voice at times a fist Tight in your throat

Jabs ceaselelisly at phantoms In the room

Your hand a carved and skimming. boat

Goes down the Nile To point out Pbaroab's tomb.

You're Africa to me at brightest dawn.

The Congo's green and CQppers' brackish hue,

A continent to build With Black Mans brawn.

I sit at borne and see it all Through you.

In Part Two, "Just Before the World Ends", Maya Angelou re­flects the past of her people in a racist society. In the poem, When I think About Myself, a Black Woman thinks back on her life and laughs so hard she almost chokes. She thinks about bow she worked for white folks sixty long years of her life, and bad to answer, "Yes ma'am" to a child who called her girl, just because she was poor and needed the money she made.

The book ends with two poems simply entitled, The Thirteens (Black) and The Thirteens (White). In BW.Ck, she describes a young ghetto child whose family

Finally - A Good :Movie With A Baseball Theme "Bang the Drum Slowly": This might sound like another There were some minor mis- only this time it's not Washing-

which opens at ABC's Arcadia corny old story. But baseball takes in "Bang the Drum Slowly" ton, but Yankee Stadium. The Theatre in Temple today, ·is a play_ers will not laugh at "Bang such as the players reaction to idea being that it's raining on this deeply moving and superbly cast the_Drum Slowly". It seems too death, but overall it is a simply catcher's life no matter what movie. · . real, too many details are per- marvelous cinematic experience. town he is in.

Adapted from the Mark Harris feet. One of the things that One part of the movie which at The story is eorny and there novel or the same title, it is a makes the· movie is that the first may strike the viewer as a are a few minor mistakes be· story about a marginal catc~er actors look like ball ·players, not mistake is actually intentional rnuse of the details. But all con· named Bruce Pearson, the ObJect only Ol! the field playing, but, and has a good effect. You see sidered the performances were of everyone's jokes, who sudden- more important, when they are the tarpaulen being pulled over a mnrvt>lous ly becomes "one or the boys" not playing. Director John Han- rainy field in the Washington Robt>rt De Niro is Pearson, the when his teammates discover cock went out and got actors who D.C. Stadium. Out to the locker entrher and Michael Moriarity as that he might die at any moment have spent some time playing room and players singing about his friend Henry Wiggen, the from a rare disease. sports, and it paid orr. d£>atb-the song Is "Streets of piteher. · BB/f$ 8111Jk R.W.W Larcdo"-and looking at "doom· "Rang the Drum Slowly" Is at

cd" catcher Bruce Pearson. Now last n good movie with a baseball ZELDA back out to the tarcovered field theme.

By Cindy Wllcoxln A passionate, energetic, emo­

tionally disturbed woman. This was Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald, sub­ject of Zelda by Nancy Milford. Wife of F. Scott Fitzgerald, Zelda's life was exciting and glamorous. But underneath tho facade of gaiety, Zelda was a troubled woman.

Zelda was born In Alabama, and It was thoro she mot F. Scott Fit7.gerald, a soldier stationed thoro. They fell in love, and after a stormy courtahlp wore mar· rlod, It waan't long before Scott'• flrat novel was publ11hed and they found thomsolvesln u crowd that Included Dorothy Parker, l.udlow Fowler, Ring Lardner, nnd Ernest Hemingway,

Many say that Scott and Zelda roproaenltld the youth of the twonUea. They were daring and cnrefree. They travelled throutch Europe mooting famous people. But their relationship wa1 a stormy one. Many times Zelda would walk out, or nlrt out· ra1oously with other men. She was jealoua or his writing and tried to keep him from wrltlnl(. Scott wa1 Jealous of her, Their aolf·centerednell kept them from work InK out their problema, and the altuatlon bol(nn to wor· son.

Zelda wa• con1tantly compe· tlng with Scott, The competition became 10 florco thnt they be~ran

to drift apart. Eventually she suffered a nervous breakdown and spent rlrtoen months In a hospital. When she was released they had hopes life would return to normal, but It soon became evident that living together was only making Zelda worse. Within rive months she was back In the hospital.

Scott was unable to help her hocnuso or his own emotional pro­blems. He bocume furious when she wrote " novel closely paral­leling his own. He resented her errortll lit writing, and began to drink. Evorytlmo Zelda would go home thoro would be another 11orlous qunrrel which only sop- · urated them more.

After Scott's death, Zelda chanl(ed and took more lnwrost In her family. But abo was never ngaln woll, and 11ho was In tho hoapltal when abo died. Even her death was dramatic, as her lifo had been.

Zolda Is a moving 11tory, and th01o who love blol(raphy will not regret the time It takoa to road Zulda, It 11 a love •tory, but It I• mainly the •tory of a woman'• •trUMttlo to retain hor sanity. Mrt. Milford has dono an oxcollont job of re•oarch and Iota you aoo ln•ldo Zelda'• thoul{hta. Bho al1o 11ve1 you a Rllmp1o Into tho ~tlnmoroua twen· Uo1, U. Ia truly a remarkable ploco or work, and I• ano you are

. not aoon to _for1et,

circus Kll.l.EEN- Oct. 25, Carson

und Barnes Flvo·RinR Circus, 2 porformuncos, Hwy. 190 and 30th St., tlckotllllvnllnbio In tho MU-8 nookatoro.

AUSTIN- Bon Hur Shrine Circus, City Collsoum, Tickets •2.50 to .4.00 at Highland Mall and Southwood Mall.

TEMPLE- "Ban1 The Drum Slowly", Arcadia, "Midnl1ht Cowboy" and "Whore's Poppa", Toxa1. "Tho Life nnd Time• of Judi(O Roy Bonn" and "Tho Get­away", Showtown, Gemini Screen,

Weelrend By Jane Mixon

rodeo llllNTSVJU.E- 42nd Annual

Tt1xns Prison Rodeo, onch Sun­dny In October, 2 p.m .. Prison Slndlum.

music AUSTIN- Oct. 24, Enrl

ScrUifR" Rovlow, Municipal Audi· torlum, Ticket Information call (1\12) 4ft4-S681, Oct. 28, Jnmoa Brown, Municipal Auditorium, 8t4ft p.m., Ticket lnformntlon cnll (1112) 776-11461,

DAJ,J,AB- Oct, 21, Throe Dog Night In Concert, Momorlnl Au· dltorlum, Pro1ton Ticket Agen· r.y.

Oct, 20, Guy Lombardo, Me· Farlln Auditorium, Tickets nt nil Tltcho's luoatlon1, 8 p.m.

FORT WORTH- Oct. e7, Jer­ty Rood, Convention Center Aronn, Ticket Information cnll ~2·9222.

is completely divded in all sorts of opposite directions. Poppa is in the War, Momma's so frustrated she shouts, sister's in the streets, cousin's on dope. and there's no hope for the kid and nothing left for him but his thirteens. In White, Maya describes the skele­tons in the closet of a rich white family. Momma discretely dates the chauffer, sister does every­thing she reads about in dirty books, the daughter and the son both have their problems. Simply because the white man is rich he thinks everything is alright. but Ms. Angelou says it isn't.

Having grown up in a racist society, Maya Angelou reflects the struggle of her people through the years. Simply read­ing a few of the poems by this truly gifted authoress would not only give one much pleasure, but would also yield valuable insight · into the plight of a people through many years of trials, strife, turmoil and bits of change after generation upon generation in a racist society.

art AUSTIN- Nov. 3 nnd 4, Sixth

Annunl Arts und Crnf1.11 Fnlr, Munlclpnl Auditorium. TI~MPl.E- Oct. 26-28, Anti·

fJUO Show nnd Mnrkot, Unilml Cerebral Pnlaoy Benefit, 10 n.m. to 6 p.m., Nntlonnl Gunrd Arm­ory.

theatre DALLAS- Oct. 19·21, "Tho

Student l'rlnco", Stllto Fair Mu­lh• llnll, Tickets aro State Fnir llox Olflco nnd nil Tltcho'• lll­t•ntluns.

TEMPLJi:- Oct. 19·21, "Tht> Mnuso Trap", Al(atha Chrl1tlo's my1tory piny, Tomplo Civic Tho· ator, BtU p.m., Ticket• .1.110· studont• nnd ,3,00-adult•, Roser· vatlons ca11778-8722 or 778·4751.

'· .. ;

1'',,

'

' ' ·y.

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I ~

sports Variety Of Facilities For Use In Gymnasium Many people who pass by

. Goodman Recreation Hall are not aware of all the facilities avail­ahle thl•rt• for the students and t·ommunitics use.

Rl•sidcs housing the college J{ymnasium, th1• Mattie E. Taylor swimming pool, and the offices and t·lassrnnms of the Health and Physit•al 1-~ducation department, (inndman Hall also includes an inhalat inn room, sauna, steam· lmt h, and mt•n's shower room whit•h wen• added last year unrlt•r a $66,000 donation given to t•xpanrl t h1• fadlities.

))up to innation and rising t·nst s I h1· :uldit ion to the gym cost mnrt• I han was l'Xpl•cted. Also ltll'atl'd in tht• m•w addition is a large room which is to be fur­nishl'd with a slant hoard, ah-

domibal board, Universal Weight Machine, and other equipment that can be secured.

The gym is open from 7:30a.m. to 9:30 p.m. every day except for WPdnesdays and Sundays. Wed­m•sdt~y hours are from 7:30 a.m. to fl p.m. The gym is closed ~unday.

"~upervisors are on duty and <·lasses have top priority followed by organized groups, than indi­viduals," Dr. Hilley said.

The area adjacent to Goodman Hall consists of tennis courts, softball fil!lds, an archery range, a fiv<•-hole pitch and putt golf t•nurst•, an outdoor golf cage, an at hiPlit• field, and a rustic camp sit<• known as Camp Mahaba, whit-h is heing renovated by the MII-RC Bruins Baseball Club.

the bells 4 A Girls Eye View

BY SANDY PLANT

Dear Sandy, Last time you said a .333

batting average is good, what's bad'! WHat makes a good player?

A Fan Dear Fan,

A good standard to go by is: .250 and under is poor, .250 and over is average, and around .300 is good.

Hut a batting average is not the only determining factor of a players worth. His batting aver­age, his RBI's, his fielding and his attitude, all determine his ability to play baseball. It's possible for a .333 hitter to earn no RBI's or make 100 errors a game, in which case he is not a big help to his team. But if a player who hits .240 can drive in the runs when needed or make the crucial plays, he is an asset to the team. In the same way, a player can be a good hitter, a good fielder, and drive in his share of the runs, but if he doesn't get along with his team-

mates and coach, or if he thinks only of himself, his worth to the team is negligible.

A good baseball player has to

have it together, both physically and mentally.

Yours, Sandy

Sports Briefs The MH-BC Womens softball·

team lost their first. game 15-5 to the University of Texas at Ar­lington W omens softball team in a tournament played at Temple Junior College Guthrie Field on Oct. 13.

The tournament. was rained out. before any other MH-BC games were played.

• • • Gayle Lindner, Women's Re­

creational Activities president, has challenged Dr. William An­derson, MH-BC vice-president, to a pie eating contest at 12:30 p.m. Oct. 2:1 in front of Hardy Hall.

This contest. is a part of the annual WRA sponsored "Play Day" activities program.

The MH-BC Volleyball team will play a round-robin tourna­ment Oct. 19-20 at the University of Texas at Austin. MH-BC is one of 20 teams entered in the tour­nament.

Members of the volleyball team include seniors Betty Red­dell, Deb Sims, and Merle Lukco; juniors Deborah Young, Gayle Lindner, Margie Hennesey, Bea­trice Perales, and Sherry Emery; and freshmen Faye Payne, Lois Brown, Phyllis Mesecke, Susan Brewer and Jan Evans.

On Oct. 30 the volleyball team will play Texas A&M at College Station and oR Nov. 1-2 they will play in the district tournament at Baylor in Waco.

~~~~~~-Ka~Wosmpe~~~~~~-

SPANISH CLUB DUE TO RAD WEATHER

last Wl't•k1•nd, the Spanish Club will sponsor another car wash Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. ht•hind G1•tty~; Dorm. Fee for the wash will lw $1.50.

Th1• plNigt• l'ommittee will mt•t•t Wt•dm•sday at 8:30 p.m. in Ht rihling to form 11 pledge group fur I ht• t•h_Jh.

OFFICERS 1'111 BETA I.AMHDA OFFI­

CI·~Hs Wl•rt•l•lt!clt•d nt the Oct. 11 nwl'tinJ{.

Nt•w nffit•t•rs 11r1•: 1wnior Henry I )p A1·mns, prt•Kidont; senior Ken Murri~;, v il'l•- pru11ident; junior Clnrt•ncu l.nstovit•n, reporter; nml sn1lhomor1• Jami••e De Holt, puhlit·ity t•hnirmun.

Mary llnrdin·Bnylor College husi1wss mnjorM t•nn contau•t Dr. ll••ntril•1• Huston, Mr11. Joy1•e llnrnl's or Mr. Roh1•rt WhitiR fnr nwmlwt•ship th•tnils.

CHAPEL SPEAKER Mr. HliHR nmm of l''ort

Worth will pr••s••nt "Shnring tlw Clll'isl inn l•'nilh 'l'hroUI{" th•• 1\rts" nt C:h11Jil'l, 'l'uuRdny.

Mr. Bw•h IM instrul•\nr nr phi· lusuphy nml Ohl 'l'••slnmont nl ~nut hWI'Mtl•rn llnpllst 'l'ht•olngl· t•nl S1•minnry nt. l''nrt Wurth. llu t'l'l'l•iwrl his ll.A. lh•grt•t• from MiMshu;ipJll Cnlh•gt• in 19117 nnri his M. lllv. rrnm Hnuthwt•Mh•rn ~ .. minnr.v In 1970.

Mr. Bush IM nn lll'tiw nwmhur ul' 1111' 'l'rnviM Av1•nut• Hlllllillt Chlll'l'h In l•'nrl Wnrth nnd tht• Omh'rnn ll••ltn Kni•Jln. 111M 11ru· vlnus JlnMit lnnM hlt'ludo 1\oy'N llh•t•c•tnr nt n rlny l'llml• prnKrllm, Ynuth Mlnl11tur nl .J111'k11on, MI•­RiNMii•PI• Jlllll mm Rummur MI•­Rinnnry.

Otht•r hnnnrM lncludt• Who'• Whn AmnnK SLudunb In Amurl· c•un llnlvorMitluM 1960·67, ·nnd OuLRlnndlnK YounK Mon nf Amurlr.u, 19'71.

BSU NOMINATIONS FOR LEA­

DERSHIP in the Baptist Student Union Ministry are being accep­ll•d hy the BSU Executive Coun­t•il nominating committee.

Fourteen positions are opened. Quulificntions include an active m1•mher of a Baptist Church in th<• college area. The office of int<•rfnith chairman is the only l'Xl'l'ption. This position is np1mcd to students of any Chris­linn denomination who are active m••mhers of their local church.

Vntinl{ Rhall take place by Kl'l'rt•l hnllot at a location desig­nnll•d by the nominating com· milh•t•. Candidates receiving a m11jnrity of the votes will be chwlnred elected.

APO VISITING PATIENTS AT

CIU~RTVIEW MANOR and help· in~t with tht• MH·R mu11eum are twvt•rnl prnjt!l'\11 twlecled hy tho Alphn Phi Omu~tn Frnturnlty.

A ft'llll•rnity·faculty h111l game h1111 lw••n llhlllnt•d In tht• future. Ollwr st•rvlt•t• 11rnjucts includu pr<'JIIIrin~t hnrr1•l11 for trnRh con· In hwrs, I utnrinl{ R\.UduntR, pnlnl­in~t I h1• hny Rl'lllll hnu11o, offering h<•lp clurln~e MJlring r1•giRtrat.inn 111111 lwlpln~e f11rulty momhurR.

CONCERT 'I'IIIt~ COMMUNITY CON­

CNit'l' AHROCIA'l'JON will Jlrt•· Hl•lll liM Jlllrl nf itR 1{171).74 RlliiMilO '"l'hrc•l• nn Hrnndwny", II ruvuu or Anwrh•nn mush•ul thonlor, nt 8 J•.m. nn Oct .• 2:1, in Uw Mnhoo ~~ 11fi1•nl Ct•nh•r.

Mnry Jlnrrlln·llnylnr Rt.uduntK nncl falt'ulty will hu aulmlttml hy shnwinl{ nn Mll-11 irlt,ntlflc&it.lnn l'nrrl,

BAS 1\nynl Acndomin SncloLy will

prt•llu•nl "Frnm JludoaLnl to l'nll· tic•"• u wnmon'• llhtlrntlon aeml· nnr, Thuradny, Oot. 2ft, In Town­"''"d Auditorium.

REWE '1'.Hl'..i 'l'EMPLE COMMUNITY

CONCERT ASSOCIATION will sponsor "Three On Broadway" 'l:pesday at. the Mabee Student Center auditorium beginning at 8 p.m.

"Three On Broadway", star­ring Ronald Rogers, Jan McArt, and Richard Otto, is a musical review. It has received much acclaim from press and public.

Adults will be charged $1 .and students 50c. Students of Mary Hardin-Baylor College can go free or charge with their student idenUfication card.

STUDENT LIFE Rtudent l.lfe had its inaugural

meeting Friday, Oct. 12, at 4 p.m. Student momben of this com­mit.teo nro Margie Hennesey, Donnn Drew, Diane Parker, Gnylo l.indnor, Dannie Hefner. Rill Elliott., Betty Barnes, Rlch­nrd Mnn~tum, and Nora Scnggs, t•hnirmnn, rupresont. the admlni· HI r111inn. Fneulty members nre ,Jnyt'l' llnrnoR, Minnie Hender· tmn, llutlyt• Wilson, and Maurine llurkR.

lluRinc•sR trnnRnctud Included lht• npprovnl of the Jntur·Dorm CnnRtitul Inn.

TSEA 'I'HI'~A mul 'l'hursdny, Oct. 11,

In 'l'nwnRtlnd Auditorium. Arter a hric•f huMinuMs meutlng, a pnnul rliMI'\IMHinn on llroblema In IIOt!on· rlnry t•riul'llt.ion wn11 Jlrollenlud. Guu11t mttmbors or tho pnnel wuru Mr. Jack Gunlock, Donn nr Bnys 111 Tllmplu lliKh School; Mr11. l1nt. McFarland, Engli•h t1•111'h1•r In tho Dolton School MYHit•m; nncl nr. 1'. A. r>nnnolloy, prnft•RMnr nf Mcwondnry udur.ntlon nt Mn-nc.

'l'ht• t•luh, which now hn• 112 nwmhltra, will noxt mlloL on Nov. H. ThP aponkor will be Mr. Ot•nrMt• Onvla, 1•eraonnol Dlroc· tnr, •romplo Achool Platrlat. Jlo will •peak on "Tip• on Teacher 1 'olllllnn","

PANEL MEMBER - TSEA •••ber• cU~ ...... ..,. .. ueatloa.

Response By Hal 8pellht•

WHY ISN'T THERE A DE· CEMBER GRADUATION AT MARY HARDIN-BAYLOR?

-J.M.

Mrs. Ar&L Leo Normnnd, MH-B registrnr, 11nld that there hasn't yet been n need for a Docombcr grnduntlon. MH-B hns boon on thu "Rhorlened somes tor system" for only 3 years. Mrs, Normnnd stntod thut tho nvorago eliglblo ~trnduntus for Pecombor, Mny, nnri Aul(ust nro 50, 100, and 70 ruspectlvely. "Thoro has novor houn more olltclblu gradunto11 In Ducemhor thnn In Mny ns many RtudontR bollovo," •he addod. Mrs. Normnnd &llid that flnnl ~trndoa nron't duo unl.ll Doo, 22 nnd thnL would pul. n Pocombor grudunUnn durlntc.Chrlatmna, which would dlsal(roo with moat JWOJllo, Rho nl•o anld Lhal. before full flnnh1, nil oliKiblo Pocombor Krnduntllllnro lnvlt.od l.o u Lunch· tlnn nt which ll "l~otLor or Grndu· nthm" would ho proaontod to onch Krndunto, to aurrtco until a dlplomn I• proaentod -at IJrndun· Uon. In rocenl. yonra, or tho1o lnvilod, rmly nhnuL ten porconL hnvo nLt.ondod tho lunchenn or ncknowlodl(od their lnvlt.uUnn. Mra. Nnrmnnd •"ld that n Do· comhor l{rndunUon Ia nolthor rlnnnclnlly foaalble nor neaaa•ar,y 111. thl• Umo, but If a need arlaeaiL will bo oponlx. aonaldored, ·

WHY DO THID GIRLS WHO 141VE ON ·CAMPUS HAVEl A

HANDBOOK AND RULES TO OBEY AND THE BOYS WHO LIVE ON CAMPUS DON'T?

-M.E.A Mrs. Norn Skaggs, a11l1tant

dean of students, said thai. this Is .n misconception shared by many Rl.udonLs. Both female and malo dorm.rosidonts have admlni1tra· live rulos to follow. Mrs. Skaggs Raid thnt tho Rirla have an esLab­lishod nn approved handbook nnd conaLitutlnn bocauao MH·B hnR boun n toLally fomalo lnaLI· l.uLinn unut recent yoara and has hnd tlmo to dovolop Lhoao ruloa, Shu Rllid that tho boye do havo a tompornry conatitul.lon nnd rule• 1-o follow, hut until. this rail It's boon only temporary. Mra~ SknKKS nlso 1ald that two woeka ngo, Oct, 8·12, ll propoaod con•U· tuLion for malo dorm ro•ldont• wns pru11untod lo Lhe SGA and thon to St.udent Life for their npprovnl. U accopt.ablo It will be lot.or rnLICiod by tho Admlni•Lra· Uvo Cnuncll. Sho aald that differ· unt currow, •IKn·nut and punl•h· munl. rulua uro rollowed by bnth, hut Lhnt thla 111 expected nn a cn-od enmpua, Mra. Skal(ll add· od l.hnt •omo of thoeo rullta onuld he ohnnl{od •oon,

• • • All ron•nnablo queaLiona per·

tnlnlmc Lo MH·D (campua lifo, protcrllml, bulldlnra, otc.l will be nnaworttd, Give your queaLiona to Mr. Ron HurL (olflao and pub­llahlnuonm, ICI,y·Pepper Halll or ""Y 81DI-4L8 aLaff member,

•'· '.

A girl_ whistling to "Goldylocks and the Three Bears" ... A doctor performing a soft shoe dance ... The junior class de-monstrating an MH-8 "function" and

. the stage crew receiving last minute "'·· , ·:·.~,~:sw·-~~~t!~dor1:.;;,~ .,, .• "<:.: :h· .,_ •. :.:.:::<.:·\_··::_,~ _.;· , .. : ... ,~---···

.. ; .']~ ... ~~~ •. ~;··~-.,.•~ (.Jt~· .. :~~--:·•·,,,.,._, .... ·. ··r,·t; .. -t·.;. ,:-"";·

· ·:·.Talent_.·· It· takes· talent .. to slog·' the last·. ·., .. word ·<;)f ill. song qr daf\ce the final-- step-. .. Talent-was defined Oct;·l& as students of Mai"YH~rdin- Ba'fl~r C~llege and faculty members presented· their version of taler.ll~:~-- ·· ·· ·

Songs: were sung, steps were danced, pian_oa:were pl~yed oii, and comedy skits were laughed at.

· In the end, the talent competition between the classes could yield only one winner and that was the senior class as Sharon Pavoggi, class president, beam-ingly accepted the plaque. ·

So ended "Talent and Stunt Nite", a tradition at Mary H--rdln· B~Y.JQ.I".:: Cql_~

a student publication of mary hardin-baylor

friday, oct. 26, 19T3

Text by Cindy Ortiz

Stunt Night

Shows Talent

'· ,•

\:·-.

t.'.

(, ,·.~. :; 1:\'

news By Joha Snyder

At fU"st glance they could be taken for a ·father and son enjoying a ball game, riding a motorcycle through the woods, or kneeling together in church to pray.

They can be seen thoughout Bell County participating in every activity imaginable. Some skeetshoot or fish while others prefer to stay at home and build model planes or play chess.

The twosomes are part of a national program to curb anti· social behavior in young men. The boys range in age from 8-17. Some of them have juvenile records or other sl!lf·destructive personality traits. Some are bois· trous while others are quiet and shy. No two of them are alike but they all have one thing in l~ommon. They all need male influence and companionship.

The men, several of which are MH-B students, are big brothers from the Big Brothers of Bell and Coryell County, Inc. Most of them arc between the age of 25-50. They arc mature, 3tablc, personable men of good charac· ter who arc willing to take the time to help unfortunate young­sters in becoming productive citizens.

The big brothers provide the understanding, affection, sym·

Big Brothers

Give 'Life' To Others pathy and guidance that is so necessary to a young boy. By providing the youngster with the assurance that someone cares, the big brother becomes a source of hope for him. The big brother is not a substitute probation officer or social worker.

The Big Brothers of Bell and Coryell County, Inc. is located in Killeen, Texas. Mr. Dan D. Acree is the president of the new organization. The organization is in the process of getting a national charter. It is partially funded by the Killeen United Fund.

The Big Brothers office pro·

eesses 3-4 applications for big and ·little brothers each month. Only the little brothers with serious and immediate problems are accepted into the program.

To be eligible to enter the program, a boy must be between the ages of 8-17 and lack a father or adequate male figure in his life. It is believed that boys below the age of eight and above the age of seventeen cannot benefit effectively from the program.

When a man volunteers to become a big brother, he is screened by the membership committee and a staff worker. If he is selected, be·wm be assigned to a boy whose interests match his own and whose needs can best be fulfilled by his friendship. The relationship could last for many years. The only reward for him may be the satisfaction of helping a young boy to find a meaningful way of life.

Although the program is pro­gressing in Killeen, there is an urgent need for qualified, mature and meaningful men to fill the needed big brother roles. Per­sons interested in further infor· mation about the program may contact Mrs.Susan Douglas at the Killeen Boys Club on Tues· days and Thursdays between 3-5 p.m.

BSU Will- Host Belton Revival by Betsy Adams

The Mary Hardin-Baylor Campus Revival will begin Oct. 28. at the First Baptist Church of Relton. The remaining services will be in the Walton Chapel on thl! MU.B campus through Nov. ).

FllUtured in this year's annual campus revival will be Evangel· ist Jim Keith from the First Raptist Church of San Marcos nnd Tommy Gillespie, music dirt!etnr.

Om• of the highlights of the rt•vivnl will he the performance of Wl'llspring. n student-to· studl•nt singing grnup. They will lw pt!r£nrming the last night. o£

the revival, Nov. 1. The group members arc Elton Bost, Bruce Lampert, Jana Scott and Candy Smith.

Jim Keith, the evangelist, is a l,rradunte of Southwestern Sem· inary. Tommy Gillespie, music director, is also a graduate of Southwestern Seminary and is presently music director at. the First. Baptist. Church of San Mnrcos. They arc both working with college students on the Southwest Texas State Univer· sity campus.

A member of the S-T·S singing (JUartct, l<~lton Bost. is a 22 year-old graduate of North Texas St.nt.e University. He has held

positions on Freshman and Ex· ecutive Council of BSU, as well as Special Studies chairman.

Another North Texas State University graduate Bruce Lampert has served. on the steering committee for "Discover Peace Week ... He is 22 years old and a history major.

The third member ofthe S·T·S group is Jana Scott. While at· tending Southwest Texas State, Jann was a member of the Freshman and Executive Council of B.S.U.

Candy Smith, 26, was Vespers Chairman at Howard Payne College. Candy has been a mcm·

thebeUs 2 Mrs. Kinsey ·LikeS MH-B Hoasekeeping

By ~yrta Smith.

How would you like to keep house for the MH-BC family? Chances are the "house" would be too large, and the family too numerous for most people's liking. But Mrs. Loretta Kinsey, head housekeeper, for MH-BC, and second mother to many a student, thoroughly enjoys her often challenging job.

Mrs. Kinsey is supervisor of the housekeeping department, buildings, and purchasing of supplies. She feels at home on her job because she has always enjoyed housekeeping and work· ing with people, especially young people. She not only acts as supervisor, but also as a friend to the 21 people under her. "If they have personal problems," Mrs. Kinsey said, "they feel like they can come and talk to me. I may not always be able to help. but. I can always be a good listener, and I feel that I can share with them what Christ bas done for me."

Reflecting over her past nine years on campus. Mrs. Kinsey notes a number of changes have taken place. The college has not only gone coeducational. but has also reformed the dress code. Not too many years ago, women on campus were not allowed to wear pants suits. "I remember.'' Mrs. Kinsey reflected, "when girls would go home with me and

. if they wore pants, they had to go out the side door of Burt dorm". Other changes have been that chapel no longer meets twice a week and the girls now have a smoking room in the dorm. Four new buildings have been built in the past. nine years, Gettys, Johnson, the Chapel, and the· Student Center.

Loretta Jernigan, at the age of 16, was married to Lee Roy 1{insey, aged 18 on July 8, 1989.

Mrs. Kinsey and her husband now live on a 435·acre ranch on the outskirts of Salado. Mrs. Kinsey loves working in her vegetable garden and canning. Each year she finds time to can more than 200 jars of vegetables and fruits.

This year. Mrs. Kinsey hasn't worked as much in her garden as usual because of a mishap in May. While pulling weeds in her flower bed she failed to notice a rattlesnake. Unfortunately. the rattlesnake did notice her and

·Mrs. Kinsey spent some time recovering from its bite. "Some· how," Mrs. Kinsey added, "I just can't enjoy gardening as much now."

According to Mrs. Kinsey, the best thing she and her husband ever raised on their ranch were their three sons. Dr. Winston Kinsey is now a History Profes· sor at Appalachian State Uni· versity in Boone, N.C. Nolan Kinsey is a high school Principal in Moody. He is one of the youngest principals in Texas. Nolan is now 28 and is in his fifth year. Travis Kinsey bas taught school four years and is now building and contracting homes. Travis was one of the first 17 men to graduate from MH-B. He -was the only one that wasn't a transfer student and. at age 20, was the youngest to graduate. In fact, all three Kinsey boys and their wives attended MH·B at some time. Maybe a record for one family ..

Mr. and Mrs. Kinsey also own and operate the Kinsey Drive-In Grocery Store in Salado. They arc both active members in the Salado Baptist. Church and be· lieve, "that. we arc here to share Christ in our lives." Mr. Kinsey has been a deacon for 24 years. Mrs. Kinsey teaches the Junior girls Sunday School class and sings in the choir.

Kaleldos(ope CAROLYN TICE, a senior

speech and drama major from El Paso, hilS been named director or the 1974 Miss Mary Hardin· Baylor Pageant.. Thiss will be the third consecutive year she ha• diroct.ud the Pageant..

'l'oxn11 City 11ophomoru Tori Monro will serve ns assistant dircrtor. Miss Moore Is an nc· t•ounting major.

Tht• pnl{oant. will be colobrat· ing Its firth year and Is In conjunl•tion with tho Mh11 Toxaa and MiRR America Pageants. Sharon Pnvoggi, aenlor phyalcal cdur.ation major, Ia the current Ml11s Mnry Haardln·Baylor. Shtl rt•proscnted Mll·B at. MIHR TtlxaR l'lll(t•nnt. durin!( July.

Tht• Pagoamt will be Foh. 28, March I and 2, In Lillian Shelton Thtlntrc, Maboo Student Cont.or.

DONNA DR&W, aenlor hi•· tory major from Coppera1 Cove, proaonted a papyr titled ".Jamoa FerlfUIOn and lho Election of 1914" at a lunnhoon moet.lnR of l,hl Alpha Theta International honor ancloty In hlatory at Mary Hardln·Baylor nn Oct. 18.

Mlaa Drow, who Ia pre1ldent of MH·B'a Eta Omlcran chapter, hal read paper• at tho Intern•· tlonal convention of Phi Alpha Theta and tho nat.lon1l convon·

tlon of Alpha Chi honor scholar· ship society.

PHI Al.PHA THETA lnt.erna· t.lonal honor society In hiatory lnltlnt.od 12 now members In ceremonies Oct.. 14, at. Mary Hardin-Baylor College.

Now members Included Janet Auront.v., Ray Woodrurr, and Helen Wllaon of Killeen, Jack Mav.v.uca, Freddie Floyd and J. A. Moland of Tomplo, Carl Park· hurat and Marvin Ward of Bel· ton, Margy Honnoaaey of Ban Antonio, Mollaaa Duvall of Houa­t.on and Kathy Schat.tale of Lott.

Phi Alpha Theta Ia the largeat. In nuinbor of chapter• of t.hoae 10clet.lea accrodlt.od by tho Aa1o· elation of College Honor Soelo· t.lo1.

TJIF.: BELLS relfl'etl that Alpha Phi Omega wu lncorructly ldont.lfled aa having 1pon1ored the dance which waa Oct.. 18. Tho dance had no official achool or APO connectlona.

TERESA GANTT wa1 elected to ropre1ent. BOA In the Min Mary·Hardln Baylor Pa1eant at 8GA'1 lelfllllt.lve meetln1 Wed· ne1day In the Spiritual Life Center. Other mattera of bull·

ness discussed included reactions to tho talent. show. Donna Curb, presented suggestions lor next year's show. The November Informal Reception waa changed to November 19, and will feature a folk singer·: Alao conaldered was the matter of chooalng an ortlclal school maacot.

STUDENTS lnt.oreated In applying for tho po1ltlon· of summer mlaalonary 1hould contact Baptlat Student trnlon orflclala.

The mlaalonary muat be an upperclaaaman between the ap1 of 18 and 25 wltb 60 aemoater houra, The mlaalonary mu1t al10 be an active member of tho Bapt.lat church.and participate In BSU.

For further Information, In· toro1ted 1tudenta 1hould contact Richard Manpm, BB.U dlrect.or at. MH·B, at . ...,x 4~ or telephone 989·11811.

DR, BllATRIOID--HUSTON, chairman of ·the Department of Bu1lne11 ·Admlnl•tratlon, ha1 been appointed &o t.he Education Oommltt.ee of the Texa1 Bu1lnt11 llducatlon A1aoclatlon for a three year"term.

Dr. Hu1ton al10 attended an October conference In LonfYiew

whore abo served on the Execu-tive Board of tho TBEA. doing it. A 10 x 12 ft.. booth apace

Tho Bruin Brigade and the may be rented for $8.00 and a 6 x Bruin Baseball Club are 1pon10r· 16 ft. booth space. Including a lng the Bruin Carnival at. li-11 counter and a backdrop, may be p.m. Nov. 80, at the MH·BC rented for $10.00 A booth can be baaoball field. Thoro will be a 26c set up with any type show or admittance feo payable at the gamo that will coruply with all gate. ufety rule1. All advertillng and

Tho Bruin Brigade and the .concoulona will be taken care of Bruin Ba1oball Club are In the by the Bruin organlutlona. proee11 of aott.lng up flfty·elght Ml'l. Jim Plant, the Bruin booth• around the urnlval Brigade 1ponaor, uld that ahe ground•. All club• and orgaalu· ha1 gotten good reapanae 10 far tiona, on and off campua, are and Ia looking forward to a very invited to participate In 1ett.lng aucceuful turn out. The Bruin up a booth t.o help rai1e money organlut.lon1 hope to make thla i thelr.~aaury th~ ~b~ili; ~~•••"lvlcyi

Publl1htd weekly at Mary Hardln·Baylor OoUip u pan of the ltudent activity. Rtt.urn pottap parantHd. llntend at the Poat Offlee In Belton, Texa1, a1 IICIOnd-elau matter under the Act of March 8, 1918. ldltor .......................................................................... , .. IJveiJn lml'h Ntw• lclltor .................................................................... DIIne Parker (lop)' Bdlt.or ........................................................ ,,, ............. Clllcl' ORll Sport,• mdltor.,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .. ,,,, ...... ,,,,,Mikl WUUam• Aulat.ant Sport.• lldltor ................................................. Norrla rraller Photopapher •• ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ....... Riekr Boll•• Aulltant. Phot.ol"apher ................ ; ................................... Jan We1tfall

-

cOmment UFOs Are Replacing Goblins

By Jane Mixon The recent sightings of un­

identified flying objects (UFOs) have excited many people in the central Texas area. Some people think the reports may lead to a new approach in the observance of alloween.

In past years the UFO reports included shiny objects in the sky and flashing colored lights. This year the reports are of actual sightings of creatures.

In Pasacagonla, Miss., two fishermen stated that they were abducted by red-skinned crea­tures with slits for eyes. They were taken aboard a nonterres­trial craft, examined and photo­graphed.

Another police station in Mis­sissippi received several reports of silver-skinned horned creatur­es walking along a nearby high­way with a red flashing light. The police investigated and found three youths. The boys had wrapped themselves in alumi­num foil and arranged coathang­ers for horns. One was carrying a red flashlight to scare motorists with.

With the modernization of the American culture, outhouses are available almost solely at con· structions sites. ~he police frown on egging iind water ballooning· cars. The fire department regu· · lations only permit bonfires in specified locations.· So the youth of today have had to look to new avenues for their Halloween pranks. ·

The UFO reports with their vivid descriptions seem to have given the pranksters new ideas. Thus UFO creatures have now joined the ranks of the goblins, black cuts, witches and evil spirits. For that matter, the creatures may be the cause of the unexplainable occurances on Halloween as well as other holidays.

Santa Claus a UFO?

the beUS 3

CHRISTIANS ALTERED HALLOWEEN When Robert Burna wrote

that "aomo merry, friendly, countra folk• baud their Hallo· ween," he· waa referring to the eve of tho Chrlatlan featlval All Hallow• or All Saint•' Day aa It later waa called, ·

But deapite the Chriatlan name, tho Halloween that millona of Americana celebrate each year originated in paJan time• and haa never really taken on a Ohriatlan ai1nlflcanco.

There wore two different October featlvala durlniJ earlier tlmea and they are both repre· aented In preaent Halloween actlvitlea. When a peraon duokl for applea, ·or throwa an apple parln1 over hi• ahoulder to aee what initial It makea on the floor, he Ia dolnl aa the analent Romana dld-honorln1 Pomona, the Roman Jloddeaa of oraharda and eapealally of apple oraharda.

When a Halloween aelebrant ll1hta a candle lnalde a amllln1

Halloween. pumpkin face, he ia Imitating the Celtic Drulda of Northern Britain who lit a fire to acaro away winter and tho evil apirita who were waiting to come ruahlnr in when aummer waa over,

· Other northern tribea In the Germanic and Scandinavian eountrloa alao lived in terror of "the raging rout," •• they called

On that night between October and November, the .Druid• kindled groat flrea on the hllla aa a barrier a1ainat tho evil to come. Theae Halloween flrea atlll burn every year in many placea, oapecially In Scotland and Walea,

By wavln1 burnin1 wlapa of plaited atraw aloft on pltahforka, people tried to fri1Men off · demona and wltahea, but juat in aaae thia didn't work, they a110· put on groteaque and terrlfylnl co•~umea. The ~pie bellevtd that If a per10n dreued ae a aplrlt and trooped around with them all nlrht the aplrlt• would think the pretender waa one of them. Then October nl1ht villi• were the orlpnatlone of the pre11nt aoatumed veralon of

the evil aplrlta whom they be· lleved to be led by the Norae god Odin.

Halloween weather waa one of tho greateat Importance to thoae people, for the day wa1 proph· otic. If the rout or aplrita came In on a aoft wind, the next year would be oaay and good; but if tho rout came raging In, the year would be full of .. dneu and .warfare.

The Halloween tie in to a Chrlatlan holiday aomee at midni1ht, when All Sainta' Day beaina, The day before All Salnta' Day waa called Allhallow mve, later ahortened to Hallo­ween, All Sainta' Day and All Soula' Day, which ia the day after, are the two daya originally dedicated by all Ohrlatiana, and now more particularly by the Roman Catholic Ohurah, to the remembrance of early Ohrlatlana

who dlod as martyrs for thoir faith.

Yoara ago, it was the cuatom In aomo countrlo11 for t1ach family to aot tho table with food, thon leave for church. Tho doora to tho houao wore loft open. At church, tho family prayed for mombera of tho f11mily WhO hi\Cl diod.

Meanwhile, back homo, thlov· ea and boKgara who know tho cuatom, •warmed Into tho un· locked heuaea aa aoon aa tho peoplo left for church. They holpod thamaelvoa to the food and often houaehold sooda. Thia cauaod tho cuatom to eventually be abandoned.

So when Halloween rolla around, porhapa the thourht of a painted Druid or coatumed Noraeman will aauao a •ll~rht tinsle for trlck·or-treatera In tho cool October nirht and . maybe even add to the enjoyment.

'I, \',.

' ' ''· .,, ' t ~ <

' ',, ,i'

sports

Cheerleaders Boost SpiH • This year marks the first organi:r.ation of the Mary Hardin· Baylor College cheerleaders.

The five women and one man group is sponsored by Mrs. Jim Plant. Their purpose Is to pro· mote school spirit and interest in

all MH·B events . Cheerleaders for 1973-74

consists of juniors Betty Davis and Jennifer Jordon; sophomor· es.Linda Glass, head cheerleader Robin Boyd and Mike Williams; and freshman Margie Michaels.

Sports Briefs "Piny Ony", sponsored by the

Women's Rccrontional Assocla· tion of Mary Hardin-Baylor Collogll, will begin at 12:30 a.m. tomorro~ in front of Hardy Hall.

Rovllrnl of the events will indudll a pic eating contest, an t•gg tosK, and a flag football game between the "Sunshine" classes nnd tho "Rainbow" classes.

Ribbons will be distributed to thll winners In ouch event.

Tho Mary Hardin-Baylor nrulns lost R baseball game Oct. 18 to tho Temple Junior College I.eopards, In Temple, by a score of 3-2.

Tho Bruin loss occurred as n result of a controversial ph1y at third base. An umpire said 11 Bruin runner failed to tag up at third base before going to home plato for tho score.

Resoonse By Hal8pel1hts

(t - What is tho name of the l'nmmlttllu, if thoru Ia one, th11t plnnH lho Chapi!l progrnma nnd l'llllnlii'H tho J(Ucst. Hpcnkors'l Hnw nrt' tho 11penkor11 choRon and why nrfl thl!y nskod to como to Mnry llnrdln·llaylor'l - 1'. M.

A. - llr .• J, A. lluynnldR, bond nf thu HuliKion Oopartmunt, snld that thu ChriHtinn Mnturlt.y Commltt.l'O hnH thn rllKJlonslhlllty nf pro11unt.lng tho Chnpul 111'11· grnm11. T>r. RoynohlN IN thu 1~hnlrmnn of t.ho commltttw and thu fn1~ulty mombora nro: Mr. Hohort Whlthll Mr. Jnmua Mil· lor: llr. Robert Smith; Dr. Tlld

' Austin nnd Dr. Pan Mhn. Two or throo •tudontl will bo nddod to tho commlttoo In tho near futuro. The committee plana ~ho pro· grnm1111t lua1t a aemoater ahond. Pr. Reynold• anld, "Tho phlloao· phy or our eommlttoo Ia to try to pick na many Iaymon or non· clortrymon 111 pnaalhlo. Wo want tho apo~tkora to be on ~ho aamo IOCIIoln~laal lovol a1 tho atu· donta.' Ue alao aald that tho

"theme IIJlJlrnllch" is used In chnnslnK 11 topic th11t Is assigned to the spenker. This Is done so th11t 11 Chrlstl11n IIJlprollch Is ust~d hy o11ch guest speaker In hl11 nWNSIII(tl. Or. Reynolda added thnt thtl t.nplc11 or subjects aro .lnlnUy lll{rlle:l upnn by t.ho com· mit tllo, hut th11t a lot of tho toph~ KllggoRtlonK romc from tho 111 udunt bndy nnd other fnculty nwmherN. 'fho I{Uttllt 1puaker11 11ru given oxpunMu money only nnd most thlltllrt! n•kod to 11ponk ncct'Jlt. Ho al11o 11nld thnt 11poak· urs nrc cluu1en from all Chrlatlnn dunomlnntlona. Jf you have a 11\lggu•tlon for a Chapel program, present It to Dr. Reynold•, room 20:J, Ely-Pepper Hall, for conald· uratlon.

All ron1onahle 1uoatlona por· talnlnK to Mary tardln·Baylor Collo~o (campua llro, programa, bulldlnl(a, etc,) will ho anawerod. Give your queaLiona to Mr. Ron Hurt (ofrloo and publlahln11 room, lilly·Poppcr Hall) or any Bl!lLLB atarr member.

the bells 4 M·H-B Go.lf Team Qualifies, Sc:hedules First T ourna11ent

The MH-BC Golf Team began action this year in a match with McLennan County Colleges Golf Team at Waco Oct. 26.

The golf team is comprised of seven members coached by Dr. Lewis Hilley, Athletic Director of MH-BC.

Names of the golf team mem­bers are: Paul Staples, Scott Berry, Jim Thomas, Butch Price, and Bobby Caruthers who are all · juniors; Glenn Simpson and Mike Schuetze are the only sophomor· es on the golf team.

Staples is the team captain, from Atlanta, Ga. He is a

physical education major, and a College All American Golfer. Berry is from San Antonio, and a physical ed major, who transfer­red here from San Antonio Junior College. · Thomas from Gatesville is a business adminis­tration major, and transferred here from MCC in Waco. Price from Gatesville also, a business administration major, transfer­red here from MCC in Waco.

Caruthers is from Waco, and is majoring in business administra­tion, transferred here from MCC in Waco. Simpson is a business administration major from Rock·

dale. Schuetze is a business administration from San Anton· io, and is the only golfer who played on the MH-BC team last year.

The five MH-BC Golfers who will compete in qualifying rounds for the Texas Open, at the Wood Lake Country Club in San An· tonio on Oct. 26, are: Jim Thomas, Scott Berry, Butch Price, Paul Staples, and Mike Schuetze.

Jim Thomas spokesman for the team said, "interteam competi· tion is currently in progress to determine the five starters".

Girl's Eye View BY SANDY PLANT

Dear Sandy: Do bats come in different

sizes? Signed, A Fan

Dear Fan: · Bats come in different weights,

and are numbered accordingly. For instance, a 35 would be considered heavy. The heavier the bat, the higher the number. A heavier bat is used for power, whereas a lighter bat is used to get around the bases. Dear Sandy:

Can you explain what a field· er's choice is'?

Signed, Confused Dear Confused:

Yes, a fielder's choice indicates that a fielder has a choice of where to put the ball for an. out. If a ball is hit to the short stop when a runner is on first, and the short stop throws to second base, the hitter is scored not as a hit, but a fielder's choice.

Signed, Sandy

Dear Sandy, . What is the difference be·

tween irons and woods? Why are they numbered?

Curious

Dear Curious, The wood is a longer distance

club, and physically is longer, too. It also has the least amount of loft on the ball. The iron is used for accuracy and hitting the greens.

The clubs are marked to indi­cate trajectory and the distance the ball will go. The lower the number, the further the ball will go. And the less loft appears.

Yours, Sandy

• • Sandy Plant Box 337 MH-BC

Br1lns Split Do•ltla-heatler Wit• T JC Leopards

By Norria Fruler though MH-B managed two hits In the first Inning of the second The Mary Hardin-Baylor and TJC, one. game, Temple Junior College

Bruins split a doubleheader TJC's first score came as a went to work quickly as they baseball game Oct. 20 with Leopard homered his way in tho scored one run. Tho Bruins failed Temple Junior College. sixth Inning. The highlight of tho to get on tho scoreboard.

The Bruins proved victorious game for MH·B came In the sixth Neither team was able to score In tho first game by a score of7·2. inning when Jim Plant and Mark until tho ninth Inning when tho The odds were against MH·B In Williams both hit home runs Bruins got one run on two hits, the second game as they wore leaving tho score 7·1,Brulns. tloing tho game at this point 1·1. defeated by a sc:oro or 2·1. Temple Junior College manag- The game remained tied until

In tho first through fourth ed to score one last run in the tho top half of tho tenth inning Innings of play, the Bruins and seventh Inning, ending tho game when tho Leopards managed to Leopards wpro scoreloiB, al· 7·2. scoro a run to win the game, 2·1.

The Outside World By Jane Mixon

cinema DEl/rON

Pro·llnllnwcon Show · 13 mini funturoH ·nil night 11hows, Bolton· Inn.

KIU.EEN "Hnlvont Groen", Cinema Ph1v.a

TEMPI.E ICnll 773·4222) Through Sntur·

dny. Arcndln · "Now You Sou ,'fhom, Now You Don't", "Dum· ho". Sunday · "Harrod Ex pori· mont"

music Q,\I.LAI

Oct, 27 • "Gilber~ and Sullivan A La Car~o", llalla• Symphony Orchoatra, McFarlin Audl~orlllm, 81\ft p.m.

Oct. 28 • · Jamea Brown, Municipal Auditorium, 8180 Jl.m. Tlckota available a~ box nfflce,

.111&.41 I iii iititiiiltiii4111&1611111

FORT WORTH Oct. 27- Jerry Rood, Convon·

lion Center Aronn, Ticket lnfor· mntlon and time (332·9222)

art AUATIN

Oct. 27·28 - "Boat of tho SouLhwoat" art ahow, St. Thor· e11a Pnriah, 4310 Small Drlvo. Snt. · Champngno Gala; 4180·8 p.m. 16.00 per couple. Bun. • Exhibition, ll·6 p.m. 11.00.

Nov. 8·4 - Sixth Annual Arta Ill Crar~a Fair, Municipal Audl· torlum. ·

tfiutre AUIITIN

"Love Ia A Time Of Da)'", Countr)' Dinner Playhouao, 886· 11921, Alan Buo1 of "Lau1h·ln"· atara.

Zil£221 !I hAl IMliiiii(JiiLII

DALLAS "The Girl in the Freaudlan

Slip", Windmill Dinner Play· house, 239·9104.

"Ninety Dny Mlatro11", Coun· try Dinner Playhouse, 281·9467, Kathy Gnrvor or l<'amily AUalr (CIIIy),

"Llbort.y Branch", American promloro of thl• British rock mu11lonl, BMU Bob Hope Thoa~or, Oct. 26·28 nnd 80, 692·21178.

circus AUSTIN

Oct. 27·28 - Bon Hur Bhrlno Clrcua, City Collaeum. Tlckota 12.50·14.00.

rodea HUNT& VILLE

Oat, 88 .,... 48nd Annual Texae Prlaon Rldeo, 111' performance, 1100 p,m,, Prlaon Stadium,

-

Zi&i.C:ii£5

..

a student publication __ of mary hardin-baylor

friday, nov. 2, 191'3

U'S .·W-HO NAMiD Nineteen • aenlora of Mary

Hardln·Baylo~ Oollep have been named to .. W .. o'•. :-Who Ainoq Studentt·ln .Amerl~n .t.J-.Jvenl· tlet and · Oollept~' · ·

ne·ruture triduatet·of MH·B and ·their aenlor accompllah· ment1ar11

""""• Drew Donna Drew, of Copperaa Cove, Ia pretldent of the Royal Academia Bocltty, Phi Alpha Theta. .and Alpha Chi. Donna Ia thll year'• SGA vlce-pretldent and a member of Alpha Mu Gamma, Baptlat Student Union and Student Life. , ...........

A rellplent of the Vann En1· une of .. the ~hree m,~le mem· lith Award l• France• Atmar of bert of Who • Who It Jim Belton. France• I• alto a member IDdwarclt of Belton. Jim lt pretl· nf the Honort Pro~ram :· : . ..;.-;.::;; · ~ent 0 ~lpha Phi Ome11 and will ., , ' · .··::: ·· :::. partl te In t.hll Jtlr'• Batter

···.Pap , IIM&A.,..U · ·-···:•· · ·

Janet Auren~• of "Uittin Ia ·· ~~~:~·:~~~~~-~,.: .. • ... :_•,.. _ currently th• rtportlr/hlltorlan. : ~m~ of Moody II a of Sltm~ Tau Dtl"'· Janet ""~~• .ii~W.ktr:. ht · t.he hlatory celved the Vann 1Dn1llah and :;~~t;RWa:r. the._.. .... Honor Schola,.hlpa. She II allo a ·.-w.~Wtlt1rii 0[ TIIIA and vice­member or the Honora Proll'lm ~Jirtllclil' tf Blpaa Tau Delt.a. and Phi Alpha Tlleta. : lfirti.illlcdht Nellltnt or the ... ,.._ ...

From Fort. Hood, IDvelrn Bennett. II the p_naldtat. ol "" Nu BII'U LamW.. She It allo a memblr of t.ht MarJ Hardin• Barlor Colltp Nurtln18t.ucleata AHotlat.lon, Ute Paeultr•lt.udlnt

· Commlt.t.tt on CurrleuluM In N......., De~ment, t.he Texu Nunlnt St.Udentl A1101llt.lon II well · u t.he National Nunln1

\~110tlat.lon.

'.•

Dr, Minnie L. Moffett Seholar· ahlp •

........... Quanah, TeiU, II the •ome­

town of Kat.hl ,..,, Kat.•l II pnaldtnt. of Slpla Alpha Iota. H ......... l Phlll IOI"'r~rHord· In·~· ......... of l&rllto lln1 Dorm, audtnt. dlrtttor of A Cappella Choir, and ...,....,, of t.he aenloralau,

PaW Beck A retldent of Temple, Patti

Hock Ia vlce-prealdent of Nu Slllfta Lambda. She Ia alao a member of the Texu Nuralni Student• Ataoclatlon, MH·B Nuralnr Student.• Aatoclatlon and the Library Committee for the nunln1 department.

DoulluHeppeek

Alto from 'l'emple Ia Dou1la• Hoppock. An active member of the tpeech department, Dou11u Ia • member of the Alpha Pal Omep and the ri'CIIplent of the Lillian Shelton Speech Award.

Nuerlrvla Oontrlbutlna IDdltor of The

Bar.lorlan, MH·B'a llterarJ ma1· •• ne, Ia Nancy Irvin. From Auetln, Nanoyla prnldent of the

· Hlltorlaal Phlla and t.reaaurer of the atnlor elan. Sht Ia ahlef Juatlcie of the Judlelal Council and a member of the aeltnce elub, SGA and Phi Alpha Theta.

.,.. ..... ..., Chairman of the 101111 aetlvl·

tlttln T&mA II Danettt Low..,. Danet.t.t, from Klllttn, Ia a 111em· ber of Sltm~ Tau · Delta and AI"'• Pel OlneC' lhe II alto the rtilpltnt. of t e MH·B Honor SthOianhlp.

8...._ Paveal Sharon Pavorp, of Jill Pa10, I•

. the relrnlnr Mila Mary Hardin· Baylor College, Sharon Ia alto Hnlor clua preaident and vice· pretldent of Alpha Chi. She Ia a member of Phi Jilptllon Mu, the Science Club, the Prealdent'• Advitory Board, and the SGA Legltlatlve Council.

Karen Rtlake Karen Reinke Ia a nuralnr

major from Waco.· Karen Ia pretldent. of the MH·B Nurtlnr Student'• A11oclation and a member of the National Nuralns St.udent'i AtiOCiat.Jon and tho FacultJ·Btudent Curriculum Committee of the Department of Nuraln1. ;., ..

From MaGrepr, Texaa, Joy Rolt Ia reporter of Phi Alpha 'nitta and treuurer of Bl1111a Tau Dtlt.a. Joy II a member of the BOA Judlelal Oounell, Dean'• Llat, Alpha Chi and Btrlbllnl Dorm Hou11 Council • .............

Prttldent of Phllspallon Mu 11 Debbie Sima. Debbie, from Bryan, Ia 1 member of t.he Women'• Rtenat.lon A1101latlon and '"'" on t.he ltrlblln1 HoUII Counell,

Evelyn SIBIUa One of the three. Belton mem·

bert of "Who'• Who" ·ta Evelyn Smith. Evelyn Ia thl• year'• editor of the 1chool newtpaper, The Bell•. Other potltlon• the hold• are neretary of SGA, treaturer of Phi Alpha Theta, and vlce·pretldent of the Alpha Mu Gamma.

leha N, Sutton John N. Sutton, of Killeen, Ia

currently the aecretary of Alpha Phi Omara and a member of TSJDA, TSTA, and NJDA.

c....a,..,... All Oolltp Mitt Charmlnl

Carolyn Tlce, of El Pato, Ia aenlor cl111 vlct·prealdent, Hlatorlcal Phlla llrat vlae·prelldent and prealdent of the Alpha Pal Om•· ~ra. She 11 alto chairman of Burt Dormitory, vlce·ehalrman of lntra·Dormltory Council and dlreetor of the Ml11 Mary Hard· ln·Baylor Collep Papant.

le Aa1 Wlt.ttll Gateavllle, Texaa, II Utt hom•

town of Jo Ann Wagon, A Dtttmber raduate, Jo Ann .. I member o Ptl Theta, Texat Home lllconomlea Aeaoelatlon, American Home meonomlce AtiOtlatlon and the rtelpltnt ~f the c. J, Davldaon Seholanhlp.

·.: .

Grover Speaks Out By Janet Scott

He is not just a politician, he is sincere, humorous, and challenging man. While these may seem strange adjectives for describing the unsuccess· ful Republican candidate for Governor of Texas, they are Hank Grover.

Grover was on the Mary Hardin-Baylor Campus, Oct. 25, for an assembly program and an informal reception. After a short speech Grover opened up for questions. Stu­dents responded with, Aren't marijuana laws in Texas too stiff and unfair? to What are your plans for the campaign in 1974? to Do you think Nixon will be impeached? All ques­tions were answered by Gro­ver even when the answers were not what the students wanted to hear.

. At an informal reception, sponsored by the Young Re-

publicans, Grover was relaxed and joking like a guest at a party, but always, always thinking ahead. Quickly the time passed, other appoint­ments had to be kept. Back to the road to the Campaign for 1974.

Family Affair By Doris Prater

'l'hc middle-aged gentleman Jluts his arm around the shoulder of the young woman 11s they walk down the side· w11lk 11t. Mary Hardin-Baylor. Passersby gape. Why, the man is old enough to be her father.

In reality, Carl Parkhurst 11nd Carla Kay Parkhurst are father and daughter, both enrolled at MH·B. Mr. Park· hurst., whose major Is history, will graduate In December, Miss Parkhurst Is working toward a major In Elomen~ary Education and will graduate In 1975.

Most. students at MH·B know Mr. Parkhurst. Ue's the mlddlo·agod gentleman with a c!lnsslc ulr about. him that. gals rnn't help but. notice. He's that. dudlcat.ed student allen walk· lnl{ awm around hla daughter und admits being aware or tho runny looks that are thrown whlltl he nnd Miss Parkhurst debate on some vital domestic or acholast.lc Issue,

Arter doing scholastic work through tho University of Maryland's overseas program nnd Central Texas Collere, Mr. Parkhurat. finds the pres· ent. altuatlon aa ravorable, "I I{Ot u big kick out or it. We ride to achool to~rether and we I{Clt a chance to see more of each other,"

As a retired Lt. Colonel, Mr. Parkhurst Is convlneed that obtaining an edueatlon lator In lire Is "great", He

finds that being a student. now Is more meaningful. ..It's easier to order·your priorities nnd there are fewer dlstrac"· tiona."

Like her father, Miss Park­hurst who spent her Fresh­man year at Baylor, fools that tho situation Is "great. I love it.. This way we have a chance to know each other better whereas while he worked we did not."

According to her, being on the same campus haa been bonoriclal oapeclally in a certain Engllah courae taught by tho same Instructor which each had nt a dlllerent time, Though both Parkhur~t and his daughter believe they spend an equal amount of time studying ror their IJI'adel he bollevea that "all my profoa· aors hnvo had great pity on me."

An oU·campua acUvitly which both enjoy Is football. Rut here Ia whore tho sharing or llko reollngs ends, Neither would want. to be In a cla11 with the other. Ml•• Park· hurst who always speaks her mind would not like the situation becauae ahe feela the Instructor would expeet much or the dau1hter of Carl Park· hurst. Mr. Parkhurat auma the Idea up In one word,

· "Inhibiting." "There Is one thlnJ that

bothers me," Ml11 Parkhurat commented, "My Dad Ia Pt· t1n1 out flrat. It 1oema like l've boon ~rolng to aahool lnnior than he h11."

Nick, Ivy And Beauties By Janice Andrews

An abstract painting bangs on the wall. There is a book­case full of candles and pass­downs. Barbara Streisand sings "People". Plants are on the Windowsill. And Carolyt:t Tice sits in her director's chair, drinking coffee and humming.

Miss Carolyn Teresa Tice is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James T. Tice, Jr., of El Paso. Mr. Tice is originally from­Temple and Mrs. Tice is a 1943 graduate of Mary Harm­Baylor. Miss Tice will receive a Bachelor of Arts in Speech and Drama with a minor in music in May.1974.

Miss Tice has been active in clubs, organizations, and col­lege activities. But one acti­vity that she gives much more of her time and tboug_ht is the Miss Mary Hardin-Baylor Pa­geant. She has directed it for the past two years and will direct it again this year. Prior to her directorship, Miss Tice was one of the ten semi-final­ists in the Miss Hary Hardin­Baylor Pageant.

Miss Tice explained accep­ting the position of director. "It was my hope to polish the Pageant, and to inform and involve the community with the Pageant." The first year she directed the Pageant, it won the college's Public Re­lations Award. This past year, it won the Best Judges Hand· book Award at the Miss Texas Pageant. In this competition there were sixty·two fran­chises competing for the award.

Miss Tice Is busy now on plans for the pageant this year. Her plans are simply to make this pageant Mary Har· din-Baylor's best.

Another area that Miss Tlce gives much of her time to is drama. She Is currently play· ing the part of Karla In "The Cup or Trembling", by Eliza· beth Berryhill. Miss Tlce also

was recently chosen to play Luisa, the female lead in "The Fanasticks". This will be the college's first musical produc­tion, and will be presented in the spring. She previously starred in "Blithe Spirit", and appeared in "The Mollusc" and "Gammer Gurten's Nee­dle", a one-act play. She was light designer for those two plays as well as "The Intru­der" and "The Bald Soprano". The theater aspirations of Miss Tice were .. heightened several weeks ago when she was selected to audition for the National Theatre Audi­tions in Ft. Worth.

Miss Tice believes that edu­cation prepares a person for a career, and that extracurri­cular activities help prepare a person for life, and that they are a necessary . part of edu-

Judge Baylor Rests By Clady Ortl&

It Ia only a matter of time until newcomers at Mary Har· din· Baylor College reallae that Judge R.E.B. Baylor, one of tho founders of Baylor College at lndependenee, Tex., Is bur· led beneath the monument near tho eternal name.

But regardless or how faml· liar people are with the final resting place of Jud1e R.E.B. Baylor, they probably are not aqualnted with the trial• and tribulation• hi• rrlends and ramlly experienced before hi• body waa rtnally put to reat.

Before his death on Dec, 80, 1873, It waa Judge R.E.B. Baylor'• request to be burled on the campua of Raylor Unl· veralty at Independence. Whon Baylor Female Oollep moved t.o Belton In 1888, Baylor'• grave remained at I ndependenae,

DurlnR thl1 t.lme the Jround• had been purahaaed by Roman Catholla prleata. Tho prleata turned old Baylor Into a ntl(l'o orphanap and a horse lot.,

Mra. l!llll Tnwn~end, whoae husband waa on110 prealdent

or Baylor Female College, wltnoaaed the sad condition of Judge Baylor's grave. A reao­lutlon request1n1 the removal of Baylor'• grave to Belton waa presented by Mn. Town· send at the Baptlat General Convention In Waco In 1916.

Tho resolution paased and tho grave waa re·lntered at. Baylor Female College on

2

cation. Miss Tice's achieve­ments have been recognized in her selection to thP- 1973-1974 Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities. . Hobbies are the last ingre­fient Miss Tice squeezed into her busy schedule.

"I love to experiment when I'm cooking-and I am r. good cook, really!" She is very fond of plants. "I have a Wandering Jew named Nick, and an ivy named Ivy; Plants are like peopl~t~ey need love and attention :too. I talk to my plants everyday, and they are doing well."· ·

Her philosophy is "Look to this day, for it is life, the very

· life of life." And she does just that.

Considering the·· many ta­lents of Carolyn · Tlce, that quote somehow· seems more impo~nt;

May 6, 1917. Baylor wae reburied on the

edge of the terrace. of the Alma Reeve• Chapel. Durln1 Prealdent J .0. Hardy! a adml· nlstratlon Baylor'• grave waa moved cloaer to the· chapel beeauae the land around the grave waa washing away.

Tho grave waa moved to Ita preaont alt.e II) the 1980a arter the ehapel burned to the ground.

Several years ap, a rumor concerning Jud1e Baylor'• burial plaae wa1 heard. Tho rumor claimed that Baylor waa burled at Baylor Unl· ver~lty In Waco and not on the eampua of Mary Hardln·Bay· lor Oolle1e, An MH·B admlnl· atrat.or aald, "Baylor Unlver· alty In Waco does not have Judge Baylor, He haa alwaya been burled here and ht will remain here,"

Althou1h the remain• of Jud1e Baylor have been much traveled alnae hla death be· OUII of the ahan111 of l(l'aYe locatlona, the ahanao• are pod that the judp haa now reaelved hla final reatln1 placa, ,

Drama At MH-B By Miehael Williams

The world has always found a way to have theatre. In ·America, theatre training be­gan with the Reperatory Com­panies where apprenticeships were available to young as­pairants. Now the only good training is on . the college or university level.

This factor has caused Mr. .. Charles G. Taylor; asistant

- ·· -professoJ" of speech and dra--~ rna, to work towards advan-cing the area: of speech and drama on the_MH-B campus. - Attbe P.resent time MH-B

··Sybil By Cindy WDeolleD

Sixteen separate and dis­tinct personalities. Any they allinhabited the body of Sybil Dorsett. . .

SybU is the true story of a shy, withdrawn _woman and the many selves sbe.assumed.

·-· .S.ti\ce the ·age of tlire'e; Sybil . . . w.ould . have . blank . periods -

· ·-:.: ·-~when -ihe ·would have no ·- . reoollection of anything ilhe ~ ·· did. Only years later when sh~

began seeing a psychiatrist did she discover that during these periods her body was inhabited and controlled by one of ·sixteen personalities.

One of the longest blank periods Sybil experienced was after her grandmother's fu· neral when abe waa nine. She "came to" two yeara later at the age of eleven, remem· bering nothing of the time in between. Later •he wa1 to find that the personality Peg·· gy Lou had u1ed her body during thoae two yeara. Sev· era I tlmea In her college year. ahe would "come to" and lind her1elf In Elizabeth, New Jeraey, or Philadelphia.

Sybil's eaae was the most complex ease ever recorded. Her female personalities In· eluded Pel(gy Lou, the lmpul· •lve; Vicky, the sophisticated; Mary, the homemaker; Ruth· ie, a baby; Clara, the reli· 1lous; MaJorie, tho tea1e; and The Biondo, a teena1er. Most surprlslnlf was that two of the porsonalltlea were male1 Sid, a carpenter and handymam

offers a combined major in speech and drama.

"We have a pretty good beginning in theory courses and performance based cour­ses but there are only a beginning. We are totally lacking in technical courses and due to this factor the student must start in the . middle," Mrs. Taylor said.

"I tliink a four year ·liberal arts college, newly coeduca­tional such as this one_ is, should offer this type of pro­gram. in addition to the other programs offered," Taylor

and Mike, a carpenter and builder. Through Sybil knew nothing of these selves, they knew everything that the others did and were able to converse with each other. Vicky served ·as a memory trace to Sybil's past and it was through her that Dr .. Wilber, Sybil's psychiatrist, was able to pinpoint the cause for Sy­bil's dissociation into other selves. · Sybil's troubles seemed to stem from her mother. Hattie

Doraett horribly abuaed and mistreated her daul(hter, and when It got to be too much to bear, Sybil would let one of her aelves take over, Her father il(nored his wife's be· havlor and made no effort to atop her . actions. Sybil's only escape was throush dlsasao-ciatlon. .

Dr. Wilber analyHd each personality. Each had parti· cular likes and lntereats, dlf· ferent. emotions, talents, and

oncert Scene IJMiellleiWIIHutt

Belton tudlencet and the MH·B Colltp family were treated to the memorable lfl'eats of the Amtrlaan Muti· cal Theatre as the Community Concert AaiOCiation preaen· ted "Three On Broadway" Oct. !18.

The pro1ram, conceived

and wrlttet' by Ronald Rodpr wat a veritable dell1ht. Star· rln1 Mr. Rodpra, Jan Me Cart and Rlehard Otto, the prolfl'am contained IUOh hltl •• "Another Op_~~nln1 Another Show" by Cole Porter to "The lmpoaalblt Drtam" from "Man of La Mancha."

In an Interview alter the performance, Ml11 McCart,

continued. '!'he college cr uni­versity that does not offer quality training in theatre and speech bas failed in one of it's obligations to it's students to expose them to various types of arts;

Taylor believes that this type of department would be an advantage to the commu­nity as well as the school.

Presently Taylor hopes to attract enough majors to war­rant the establishment of a department by producing qua­lity shows. His farst produc-

. tion of the year will be on

behavior and speech patterns. They were also different ages which caused many inner con­flicts. Dr. Wilber was even· tually able through hypnosis to bring all the personalities to Sybil's age. This helped to bring inner calm and was the first step toward fusing the many personalities into one .

Gradually the personalities became so integrated that Dr. Wilber was only able to speak with them separately through hypnosis. Eventually a seven­teenth personality emerged that was an amalgam of the other sixteen. This self had the memory, talents, and characteriatlcs of the others.

SybD is not a book to be read and forgotten. You will remember it for a long time. If you enjoyed 'The Three Face• Df Eve, you will be even· more fascinated by SyltU.

Syllll Ia written by Flora Rheta Schreiber, a woman who met all of the personall· · tiel and became 1ood friends with Sybil. She band her writing on hours on conver· utlon with the people invol· ved, the doctOr'• notes, Sybil'• diaries, and tape recordinB• of the aixteen perS<~nalltles. She had done an excellent job of capturing and holding your attention. It Is not a book that you can skim. The story is too fanclnatins to ml•• even a put of It, Take tho time to read SyltU, You won't regret it.

who has starred In such nota· ble ahows at "Carousel", ~'MY Fair Lady", and "Camelot'', said that the aaplrln1aotor or aatre11 ahould not "pay any_ attention to what anyone taya", whtn givln1 advise on whether or not to puraue a career on the stap. !'The deolalon Is made In your own mind,"

Nov. 9 and 10 when Alpha Psi Omega Dramatic Fraternity, which Taylor sponsors, pre­sents Elizabeth Berryhill's "The Cup of Trembling." The play is based on the 'life of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a Luth­eran linister who was execu­ted by the Nazi Government in 1944.

Cast in the role of Eric Friedhoffer is Douglass Hop­pock, Also appearing . in -the play are Carolyn Tice as Mama, Marsha Danilko as Eva, Eugene Saylor as Papa, Gary Lanham as Johann, Ran-

Weekend art

AUSTIN Nov. 3-4 :...._Sixth Annual Arts

& Crafts Fair, Municipal Audi­torium. cinema

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dy Clawson as Fritz, Richard Reynolds as Muller, and Mich­ael Willisms . as Ernst. Yo­landa Godsey is student direc­tor. "The Cup of Trembling" is directed by Mr. Taylor and the production is the Alpha Psi Omega entry in the Amer­ican College Theatre Festival. MH-B faculty and students will be admitted free by showing their I.D. cards. All others will be charged $1 for adults and 50 cents for stu­dents. The box office is will open at 7:00 p.m. and curtain time is 8:00 p.m.

available at Gibson's stores ir Waco and Post Special Service at Ft. Hood.

wursttest • NEW BRAUNFELS Cinema ·- tSth Annual wurstfest, Nov.

2-11, Landa Park. Some events .. . · BELTON , .. are a Sausage Dog Contest, band

. Cahdl,y. S . .Ma.~shal & !tfan concerts, canoe racing, sailboat m the Wald;~~;LE Beltoman. regatta, auto rallye, old timey

"W lk" T II" A di melodrama, music, dancing, food, Th a mg a · rca a and New Braunfels ice water.

.~Vatrelt. f H , & "T 1 Myron Floren of the. Lawrence au o .?rror a es Welk Show will return to per·

.from the Crypt ·Texas Theatre. form twice nightly Nov. 5·8. music ...

music theatre AUSTIN DALLAS

Nov. 11 - Glenn Miller Or· "How The Other Half Loves" chestra, Swing band music, 8:00 'Country Dinner Playhouse Han~ to midnight, Municipal Auditor· Conrled stars, Reservatidns by lum, Ticket information · 454- calling· 231-9457. 3681. . "Forty Caratl", Windmill

Nov. 7 - Classical Guitarist Dinner Theatre, Virginia Mayo Chrlatopher Parkening, Solo stara, Reservation• by calling Artist Series, UnJv.erslty of 289-9104. Texas campu1, Tickets .8.60 ·at door. Parkenlng is a pupil of the great BUitar master Andres Segovia. ·

FT. WORTH Nov. 9 - Tho Moody Blues,

Tarrant. County Convention Center.

WACO Nov. 10 - Charley Pride,

Heart of Texas Collaeum, Tickets S6, Sl5, Ill S4, 8:00 p.m., tickets

AU9TIN

"A Midsummer Night'• Dream", Nov. S, 4, 6, & 10 University of 'Texaa Oper~ Theatre, Utopia Theatre, 8:00 p.m., Tlcketa S2.50 at University Box Office.

"Lovo I• A Time or Day", Country Dinner Playhouae, 836· 6921, Alan Suea or "Laugh·In atar11,

the be s Published WHkly at Mary Hardin·Baylor Oollep as part of tht

student aativlty. Return poltap parantlld. mntertd at the Post OUiae in Belton, TtiU, u IHOnd·clau matter under the Act of Mareh 8, 18'18. IDclltor ............................................................................. mvelyn Smith NtWa IDdltor .................................................................... Diant Parker CopJ IDdltor ............................................ , ... ,,, ..................... Cindy Ortl1 &porta Bdlt.or ....... """"'""'''"'"''''""''"''''''"""'''''""''"Mike William• Aulltant Sportt Bdltor """"""''"'"""'"'"""'""""""'"Norrla Frailer Photopapher., ................................................................. Rielcr Boll•• Aulltant Photoll'apher .................................................... Jan We1tfall

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Playd_ay By Diane Parker

Picture twelve faces dig­ging away at apple, peach, and cherry pies topped with whipped cream. That's bow 1 the WRA Playday started Saturday. Then students­moved to t.he MH·B athletic field for more fun and laugh­ter, the egg toss, wheel bar-

row races, and the egg ex­change. The swimming events, penny hunt, nutter board race, and diving took place in the gym.

AU first, second, and third place winners were presented with ribbons.

Mrs. Chaney, the WRA sponsor, was supervisor for the Playday events.

Kaleidoscope MH·B GRADUATES in De­

cember, May or August Rhould read the following ~~heck list carefully:

1. DEGREE PLANS: A copy of your degree plan must be on file with the registrar by Dec. 1. December gradu· ntcs should have a degree plan the preceding spring.

2. DEGREE REQUIRE· MENTS: Check the degree rettuirements listed In the catalogue under which you ure to graduate. This should btl done before . you llle an uppllcatlon for degree.

3. APPLICATION FOR OEGREE: The S115 diploma fee will be paid when the del(1'ee application Ia made.

DECEMBE.R GRADU· ATES: File an application with the Registrar by Dec. 1.

MAY GRADUATES: File an application for dearree with the Registrar by March 1.

AUGUST GRADUATES: File an application for degree by June 10.

4, ROBE FEES AND IN· VITATIONS: Regalia may be obtained at. the book store prior to commencement. Ordort for Invitation• ahould be placed at the book aW.re by March 1.

a. COMMENCEMENT ACTIVITIES: Check dates and ·· ilmea of baccalaureate and commencement exeralaa and make plana to be ~treant.

8. GRADUATION IN AB· &ENTIA: All 1roduatln1 anion are expeatecl W. par·

ticipate In baccalaureat and commencement exercises.

GOODMAN GYM HOURS have been announced by Dr. Lewis Hilley, chairman of the Health and P.E. Department.

The hours of supervision Mondays, Tuesdays, Thura· days, and Fridays are 7:30 u.m. to 9:30 p.m. On Wednes­days the schedule Ia from 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.

The gym will be closed on Satqrdaya and Sundays.

THE KILLEEN A.A.U.W. will prepnt "Trash W. Trea· aure'\.Nov. 6 at the Fowler School Cafeteria In Killeen.

The program Ia a demon· atratlon of Christmas dec· orating Ideas presented by Mra. Cecil Cabaniss of AuaUn. Mra, Cabanlaa will uae ord· lnary everyday cast off and Inexpensive craft materials and create them Into holiday decorations,

Two presentations will be tclven. The first. presentation will berln at 4:90 p.m. and Ia followed by another at 7:80 p.m.

Admlaalon Ia Sl and pro­ceeds will ro to the Killeen Public Library,

T.N.I.A. Ia aponsorlnl a co·ed overnl1ht Nov. I, at the Bend·of·th•River Ranch. The event will belln at 8:00 p.m. and a barbecut supper will bt Hrved for II per person. Nuralnr majora and thtlr date• are tnaourapd W. aome out for the fun and brln1 bedrolla.

Sports Briefs Baseball

By Norris Frazier The Mary Hardin-Baylor

Bruins were defeated by a score of 7-2 in a nine inning tilt Oct. 24 with the Temple Junior College Leopards.

First inning action began with the Bruins taking an early 2-0 lead against a stingy Leopard defense that allowed no more runs in the ball game for MH-BC.

Action in the second inning was a defensive contest with no runs scored by either team.

The highlight of the game occurred in the third inning when the bil{_sp~tted 'Cats of TJC unleashed an offensive attack that broke through a mistake ridden Bruin defense to score five runs. The Leo­pards maintained the lead for

the remainder of the game, and added two more score; one in the fifth, and one in the sixth innings for a final score of 7-2, Leopards. . .

Tennis By Michael Williams

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Three members of the MH-8 Men's Tennis Team participated in the West Tex­as Open in San Angelo Oct. 21 and 22. Sophomores Cra:ig Gold, Melvin Collazo, and Roberto Trogola volleyed their way to the finals in every event.

Trogola reached the finals in the men's singles and was defeated by Kimm Ketelsen, a pro in San Angelo with a score of 6-2, 6-1. MH-B's double team of Gold and Trogola defeated the number· one

A Girls Eye View By Sandy Plaat

Do baseball players hear the fans?

This question is frequently asked of all ball players. Afterall, fans put heart and soul into their cheering, and naturally want to be heard.

However, to the dismay of the enthusiast, most players hear hardly a word. Even standing at ~he plate, as near aa a player gets to the stands, the player Is deaf to all the ravings of the erowd.

The explanation of this phen-

A MEETING OF T.N.S.A. will be at 4:00 p.m. Nov. 6, in the Mabee Student Center Auditorium. The topic for discussion is "What Ia T.N.­S.A.?" Guest apeakera wlll be Cynthia Kelsey, flrat vice­president ofT .N.S.A. and Bill Harris, second vlce·prealdent, . who will apeak on the purpoa· oa of T.N.S.A. All nursing majora are encouraged to attend. Membership dues are $9.

TRAINING CLINIC being presented Nov. 2·8 at the Mount Lebanon Encampment for students Interested In working In Youth·Led Re· vlvala.

RepreaentatlveagolnJ from MH·B are: Steve Adamek, Alvin Taylor, and Earl Lloyd. The lntere1t areas that will be covered are for preachera, music dlrectore, planlat1, and fellowship.

APO·FACULTY basketball ~rame practice ae1alon• have begun on Monday• and Thur•· daya berlnnlnr at T p.m. In Goodman rym,

The rame, aponaored by the Alpha Phi Omera, will be Nov, 18. Admlulon prlee Ia 11 for adult• and lOci for atu· dents.

HIITOIICAL PHILA and Roral Academia Society . announce their fall Initiation Nov. 18-11.

Requirement& for pledlinr art• atuden'• muaL have attended MH·B for two H· meatera aa a full·tlme atudent,

omena of concentration is rather simple. A player trains himself to forget all about the game, ·be­cause baseball demands the maintenance of physical and mental alertness. A player who is distracted loses his timing and judgement. He can miss the ball or miss his pitch to lose the game.

Often, the difference between a big league and minor league player hinges on the abUity to concentrat~. Just u a player

have a grade-point average of 2.7 (overall and/or for the semester Immediately prior to pledging, 2.65 Included), and must have carried a minimum of 12 semester hours lm· mediately prior to pledging.

Women atudentl who be· lleve that they are eligible to pledge either· society In ac· cordance with the above standards, and have not re· ceived an Invitation t.o Open House, Nov. 11, by Nov. 5, •hould contact Ms. Frances Harless, extension 55 or Box 367 by Nov. 7.

THE POETRY SOCIETY will meet at 4 p.m. Nov. 8, In the Truatee'a Room of the MabGe Student Center. Mrs. Elizabeth Silverthorne, chair· man of the Bnrllah Depart· ment of Temple Junior Col· lep, will prennt the pro­gram. All persona lntereatltd In poetry or creative wrltlnr are Invited, aald Mar)' Lon1, assistant proJeuor of Enrllah and Poetry 8oelety aponaor.

CLUII OR ORGANIIA· TIONI WIIHING W. make an announcement In The Bella ahould hav'e the Information rtady b)' each Monday, 1/.m. Ann~uneemtnta ahoul be

addreaaed w. P.O. Box d8 MH·B atatlon or telephont txttnalon 1M after I p.m. on Mondaya,

IDCCATION FACULTY of Mary Hardln·Hardln Col­lap aLttndld the Twenty· llxth Annual Oonft"n• on Teacher IDdu•tlon and Certl·

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junior college team -in the nation as they ousted Sam Nunez and Ali Khan 4-6, 6-3,. 6-2. . . . ..

Collazo teamed with Honee · Clayton, District 15 AAAA girl's singles champion to take first prize in the mixed .doub­les competition. With ·a score . of 6-3, 6-1; they· defeated the team of Oleson and Oleson in the finals. .

Badminton' A BADMINTON TOUR­

NAMENT will be played at Dallas Baptist College on Nov;· 9-10.

Students who wish to.play, either in men's singles; ladies singles, or mixed doubles:are: requested to see :Mrs. Barbara Chaney, MH-BC .. badminton coach, at Goodman Gym·· by Nov. 2 .. ·· ., ... :.· .. ·.·::--.:·

must train himself to forget the : crowds, he must also train.·him­self to forget yesterday, botldts glory and <lefeat.

A player who lives in yester­day's glory, tends to rely on it to · get through today. And no one is a winner without- giving 110% · today. Thus, it should be that a player's concentration is simply on today's. game. . . . .

He knows that yester"ay ts gone, . tomorrow will come and the fans go on ~nd '!n·

· flcatlon on Oct. 21·23 in Dal· las. .

The program offered. oppor­tunities to participate ·in Seminary sessions describing the rolea of various groups In the development.

Those attending from MH·B were Dr. C. D. Allen, chair· man of the education depart· ment and director of teacher education; Dr. William Ander· son, vlce·prealdent for Aca· demlc Affalra; Mn,· Edna Bridges, director of Elemen· tary Education; Dr. T. A. Dannelle)', director of Secon· dar)' Education; Mrs, Verna Glasa, Instructor of Elemen· tary Education; Mra, Ellaa· beth Gibson, a1aiatant pro· feasor of Home Eeonomlca; Mrs. Doroth)' Hicks, director of Klndarprten Education; Mrs. Judy Luak, chairman of the Department of Home Eaonomlca; and Mr. Harold · Thomas, director of Media.

MCJOLOR AND UGHT IN PAINTING" will bt ~ant· ed Friday at Town~~ftd Aud· ltorlum bt.tnnlnl at I a.m.

The film la a arltl of elicit• and film• aponaortd by the Marr Hardln·Baylor COIIep art. depart.ment.

Admlulon Ia 1rtt to the public and four ahowlnf are aehtcluled •.tnnlnllt a.m. and followecf by an 11 a.m. ahowlnl• Afternoon propama are I p.m. and I p.m.

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Crisis Center

a student publication o~ mary hardin-bay.lor

:friday, nov. 9, 19T3

8y Jelul Sa,._ labratory for Mary Hardin-Baylor psychology and centers would affect the center, Mr. Birdwell said, "I Nestled in the roDing hills of BeD County, the IOciology students. The students reeeive c:laues atthe believe tbatthe new legislation will help to solve many

Kinsolving Canyon Lodge presents an air of a summer lodge on a eonsulting basi& · · · · · p~blemit for the children. I believe that the family as a eamp iftsteiUI of . an . adolescent crilia. center. The Several MH-8 students have worked 'at tlie IOclie u whole will beeonie more involved when a ehild baa a tranquility of the eamp belies the faet that the ehildren eottage supervisors. Woody Brown· spends four hours proble~. .

· there have. any problema at aiL··. _ per day, five days of the week at the lodge. Woody is a "We are aeeustomed to dealing with the children on· The eampgrounds are spaeious ~ weD kept. There MH-B sociolol)' student and one of the present an individual basis. I expeet the center .will be

are no lligh fenees or armed .p&rda to keep the eounselors at the- eamp. Although the stUilelitl are P!'e»viding more eounselling for the family. We are children in ~e eamp:'l'lljfi~ jiO:JDUbnUIQ·iieeurity eaUed eounaelon.. they are in_ fact just involved· in ai~J.providing some famDy eounsellingbutl expeet eeU. or "loekup" that n eoaiiiiob"iif~tliliill superYiiblg activities around-the loci~. . to see more in the future," he said. eenterL · .. · :~-- . · ~ · The ceilter IIU·an·average.of·15-:2D Cliiidren at one Seawie the children are at the center for sueh a

Kinsolving Lodge serv'es -u.:a :.eiiitiis~:ceater fiJi:.::::- ·time. Ho~ever~. there are only. sii"etiilaii"li at the ilion' tiiiie, they are not given eonventional elaarOom chD~n. from through-out BeU;]~o\iiltJ;J~Iiililren. are-: center now. Mr. Joe BirdweU. ~--~~ for in~_-:_u§.~n. 'Oae students all partieijaate in a.one el&ss plaeedtherethroupcourtac;tio~_~..._~:tJjinilieswhO the camp said, "We are keeping the:.WMus low -~uat~11Rfpied to.:ena61e ttiem ·io 'rel&te to the are .uDable to handJe the ~:S-]Jrof~~!D.a;~ :. ·. . · becauae we are in the proeeA-. of.::biiiiiftng and _J)W:Obteins i!' _ev_!l')' ... )' J.if,. . .. _ . .

'l'll'"f..=aiUchen stay at .the ·JcMIP· rrom-~two to six· remodeling." . · :. :::=...::::::::-:: ::: ::.::._Mf.-·.Boone.·Tiylor is the sOle teaehet at the center. w~:ttks: 'During their ·stay .:tuiei:.ttie. children'• ~e_·~~ :~ntly ~_::g~~:Bt:::oamiul.ting· .:_'Mr:·_~!Or ~~tiiJ hJ:I efa:u from_ aloeal newspaper problems are anal~ by a _'"j'ijt~ are-: psyCbii~:-Mr;::BirdweU.:~]JI!(:IJie--=-C.nter' -~~~.a--~ ~.,.r eatalog. The students.are told to returned to their home ·while··~~-- sent-~10-: ·atao_,.--eQMjtnomiel&nd"faeiiitii~i¢~!i~:~unty -~--~;~·bathe w ... t·-aa. _that.ttiey.ftiel th8f.·are various treatment eenten tlmMijbout ·:the 8tate --lor Meatal Health· and 'Mental RetaiaitiOn·.ceiter on quul&ed tor. The 8t.udei\ts ar.e ~i\ _li_~n hOw .to further treatment. . \ . . ·... .: oeeuions.;. -:-.· - ~-- --:~·. write a resume •. ap.,ly for the -~----:.--.--:-...

The lodp wu established In 1&'11 u a private· The center plans to:bulld Interview. . , . . . . . . , ...,.,c:.,~•.,,. __ ,: .. center. It later at.•the_ .. 1

U.e110veiiiii-.vel~lls-'tlie CHANIPtlfS prGII'Uft and by . the . put Mary Hardia-Baylor has eontrelied the ~Nnt ~or the camp, however, Mr. Robert· Barnett, of Frederickaburl, Texas wW assume eontrol of the camp this month. · · ·

In May of 1978, the locJp · Initiated a pi'OII'&ID whereby it would provide I· behavioral seience

.. would aum· up the sermon with an appea' for money. Dr. C. v. ·l!dwarcls, colleae ofllclal, traveled throuah South Texu weeka before Mother'• Day and ulled·of those who could to make a alft to·:the colleae In membortal of their mother. Mn. Bile Moore TownMnd, founder of ·the ••eottaae Home Syatem'' allowed •~•• to sell cople~ of he:r volume- ..,.. . Clelllll Aftlr. ienMJ·I'M· Y-. fir· 12.00. a ~~· . · · ·

Other offtelall •uell 11 Dtan B; · Q; TOWIIHIId UMI Mr. H.ll.D. Walker, butlntll manarer are Nlftllllbertd for Ulelr Urelell work durlnt the Depn~~lon ,..,.,

Alan aid tp audeau. Dr. llardJ uw to It &hat. t.h• 001t. of t.ult.lon aM odler •• ,. ... wen dleraiHCI frolll Umt &o tiM. r ... lllltallll, In t.ht faU o11• 0111 could llvt In Bun Hall · rih aU expe11111 · &o&al1lll tl'ft,OO for nile IIIOIIt.hl while tiU.OO eovered roam aid a.rd, t.ult.lon. aid r.. for a Nlldent In Ruth StrlltUn1 Dormitory for a 11111 month period.

lt. WM oniJ. 1 mat.ter ol Umt befon the· atudtn&l took -.;JII 'ht ........ to. kiiP IIIJior Oolllp from

~-······· . . . ... OM:.-.mii In ~, •• tht atudlnt body taDII OYtl'.' .tht ........... ,.. aid .............. the • ..,. '""' ··~·; ,.. -- ... &o ,_ a ....... , MpiiP. . " Wftll I .:.TGfi1 000.00 &o HI Bll,llr Colllp out of •IK. ......... ;,.. tak11t .,..:

· tlaU ~!!Mi Ail pep 101P. WN IUIIIi,to kelp t.ht .

-=:.~In ..... ~.....w·f.on. Ulldrlve. · ................... wlt.li'.....,ol ...... t.eolorl IM ..... .,. lloDIII II lndii&UM of die. IIIIOUit. of tndl ... ll ......... tM drive~ . ' ' ...... ... ..... ,,.. ............ ,. ........... ....... of .... t~Mpalan, GOitllllld 11 tdlt IIIII lllh wtlk'tltl& ................... / ..... drive. a.Mii~" " ... ahowa wa.h ""-~t of tilt '-' .- 11 to &he ............ "'' •u 11111......,.. • • 111UIIe IMIUftj, ,.. .............. ".... ..... Oa .......................................

time.

"Our clau is designed tO develop the qusUtJea of the lndlvld.,al •. The clan is strletly voluntary and ita child elects.·he:may stay In the dorm and not.attend. No one hu taken the op&Jon-oi--.JIDI In the dorm yet," she i&id; :.·. . . . " '

of atudtnt.t who would do cltanlnl, waahlnt. lronlq and other IMtuHhold ehorea for the purpo11 of aldlnt · ~lor. Oollep. St.udent.a believed their appeal &o frltnda and the publllo would have IliON afftet than one .. hundred collep offltlal n~nut.lv11. They unr and. apoke t.o varioul loeal elul11 ln eupport. of thtlr eftd .. VOrt, Of 'holt lt.udlftU Who COUicl, lftCIIt 'I,

pftimlald to IUY IWIJ froin ouulde IMII'Uin•nt. t.lll &hi e~~ijqillp:· •• ovtr. Thole who lndu.._. In enWrtallimtnt would pve an equal•mount. to t.1lt pot. J•·&hrie .,,~,, .. , reuhtd the tsoo.oo mark. ··

'l'hroup' ·,h, 111\ of one-Mn. Mary Hardln-wu the. name of the othtr-.Judp Ba,ylor-ktp' aUvt In t.hlllnat.lt.utlon • .John and Marr Hardin. ranehtn fronl Burklturntt.,, ,.. .. , wen not. lnttnttecl In laJior Oolltlt at. ftrtt. bteau11 of Ita larp dtlt\.lt wu Dr, W, H. MeKenelt, mem111r Roerd oiTrUit.tll and ~of t.he Hardin'• ehureh '"'' wat larplf Ntpc»nilltlt for · havlnl · pined their lnunat. In "'' eOiltp, Tilt Hartlln'a lift of UIO,OOO. wu the larp1t. '"' ....... had ever Nttlvtd. The ftnt. ~rt of '"' lift ••ln MaNh or s•ln t.ht amount or tiii.OOO.OO. The ent.IN .......... IlliCit lllylor Oolltp ·debt ""' Tilt eo11ttt felt. it. oniJ ::1'"" 1&1 uvlor'• 1111111 .._.. Ill lliked wlt.h tlllt. lor OoDtlt· In 1• tilt 11111 wu ehan t.o Mar ardln·Ba 1M Cal •

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Students were discouraged from borrowing and wearing others' clothes, as it was considered common and showing coarseness of character. They were also under no condition to dress beyond their means. Seniors were to be shown deference; they were to be allowed to enter doors and street cars first.

These rules · are humorous, but not unbelievable when you remember that they applied to girts of ·fifty years ago. Would it surprise you to tnow that several of them were still in tJ,e handbooks of the girls attending Mary Hardin-Baylor just twenty-five years ago?

In 1948, lights out was at 11:00 on weeknights and 11 :30 on Saturdays. Radios could be played at any . Reg u lati·ons~ . time. providing they could not be heard outside the girls' room. Smoking, drinking, dancing, and card playing were still prohibited.

By Clady Wlleollea Of particular interest to girls of today is that in 1948 Sure, we all do it. Everyone has complained about there were two different sets of dating rules. There

campus regulations at some time; But things could be a were separate restrictions concerning the dating of Fort lot worse. Hood soldiers. Freshmen dating soldiers were required

Would you like to be required to attend every meal? to triple date and walt. Sophomores were to double Or receive punishment for having your lights on after date and walk. Juniors were permitted to double date ten o'clock? How many of us would tolerate a riding after five dates over five weeks. Only Seniors chaperone on our dates' To the students of Baylor were allowed to single date, and this only after five Fe~ale College, only fifty years ago, these rules were a dates over a period of five weeks. reality· The wearing of slacks was restricted to certain areas.

Freshmen and sophomores of 1923 were allowed to They would be wom to and from the athletic field, in receive young men ~allers only twice a monthe -~-the _ · .the bOokitOJ:e,• in'. th~ po~ · ~flic;e, to. Nolan Creek, on ~liege parlors. Jumors were allo~ed one date a week 'picnic:S-iDd to the swimming pool. Never were they to m t~e college parlors. Only Sen~ors were allowed t~ be worn on Main Street, in town, in parlors, or as receave gentlemen callers at any tame,· and then only af general wear on campus. Shorts were permitted only on they were approved by the dormitory hostess. Sound the athletic field. unreasonable? . At first glance chapel attendance seems sligbdy more

Students were allowed to _play popular mu~1': only on lenient that that of today. Students were allowed five Saturdays after 4:30. Sentors bad the pnvilege of cuts .a semester. But it· must be remembered that, in playing popular music at any time in the Senior room, 1948, chapel took place every day.: All students were providi!'g it did not disturb any class. This m~y ~m allowed only_ five. weekends ·away a ~mester. An amposs1ble to modem students who leave the1r rad1os excuse for one day a month was permitted for missing on most of the day. classes.

Dorm life was more strict in 1923. Lights ~ent out at Many of our present traditions were observed in 10:~ on weekdays and 10:30 on Saturday n1ghts. Each 1948, but there were a few then that no longer tate res~dent w~s. allowed to s~ay up on~ hour later ~i~ a place. One was the "Marriage" of a Freshman to a week, provadang.they rece1ve~ perm1s.sion, but th1~ tame Junior to signify the union of the two ci&Sses .. Stunt was to be spent an study. Seniors agam were privileged Night was held annually in March. And if the tint charact.ers. They could stay up after lights whenever debate at home was won by the MH-B team, the they wt~hed. . . student body went on a snake-dance into town.

Certatn offenses ~uld result an anythang from a Times have certainly changed. Those who have calldown to suspension from school. These of course joined the nostalgia craze and look back for better times included lying, .stealing and deceit: But it also included migl)t.b~~r ~k twice; TJiey would probably.find that smoking, dancang, and card playmg. life tOday is preferable to life yesterday.· •· .

Church and Sunday school were required. Two cuts Think again the next time you find ·yourself were allowed from both church and chapel. Three cuts complaining about the rules and reaulations of Mary were allowed from classes and two from meals. Hardin-Baylor. It could certainly be different.

Kaleidoscope Some Student Aid •·unda nrc still avaihtblc under two

mnjlll" programs. These nrc the Texas Tuition I·~qunlilmtion Grnnl nnd the Fedl'rally Funded Basic •~duc•ntinn OJlllorlunity Grant. Bot.h Programs are twt•cl lll\sod. Rtudents applying must pick up the IIJllllit•nllnn forms from the Admissions Office. The npplicnlinn cnn be 11uhmitted right away and possibly tlunlify MH·R 11tudent11 this fall as well as the spring.

Tht• 'rEG progrnm is for freshmen, sophomores, and juninr11, Tht' state funds arc provided in an attempt to '''tuniil'.t' tht• coat of nttending a private lnatltutlon with the low tuition cost at public colleges and univcrsltlL's. The grants can he as much as SbOO per yc•nr.

Tho REOG Is a program funded thla fall lor the first timtl. It IH avallablu to llrst·tlme full·t.lme students. To lw t•liglble, froahman atudonta can not have had any type nf poHt·serondnry education prior to July 1, 1978. Thl11 rult•a out ali froahmen who attended an early aca11lnn In the aummor achool at Mary Hardln·Baylor or any otht•r collogo. Tht' National Admlnlatratlon aeea the now program aa an anawer to tho noed for a broad haaod financial aid program for all deaervlng college lltUdl'nta. Low Conl(1'olalonal funding for the current flacal year haa mado It lmpoaalblo to pant the larp MUmll Intended when tho program besan. The maximum amount available thl• year Ia 14112. Both or t.ho•o proiJ"•m• aro for fuiJ.tlmo atudent.a only. A lull·llme 1tudent Ia ono taklnK 12 hour• or·more.

* The laJierlaR, the MH·i calloae literary maaaalne, 111 aeeeptln~r atudent ontrlea for the literary aonteat. floc. 1, 1974 haa been nt lor the entry deadline. IDntry blank• may be picked up In the bookatore and the dorma. Three double apaced typed aoplea muat be aubmiUed with the entry ahoet. Tho art entrlea mu1t fill out an entry ahoet alao. II a 1hort •tory 11 to be aubmltted keep In mind that It ahould not be more than alx or aoven typed pal(ea. Tho Baylorlan delivery dato haa been aet for April 1, 1914.

1973 BLUEBONNETS may be picked up In thA yearbook office In Mabee between 8:30-9:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Norman Northon will bo In the office at these times· for any other business concerning tho yearbook.

• "PEOPLE HELPING PEOPLE" will be tho 1974 Kodak Community Service Photoaraphy Awarda Thome.

The conteat I• dlvldod Into two catoaorloa, black and white and color. There will be elaht award• of excellence at 1100 each; elaht awarda of Dl1tlnctlon at S75 each; olaht Award• of Merit at 150 each; and Special Award• of 125 each.

Entrloa mu1t not be po•tmarked later than Pob. 1. Orlalnal tlldoa or prlnta of any alzo are aecoptablo and all prlnta muat be accompanied by the orlalnal noaatlve. ·

An Informational brochure, lnoludlna rulea and omclal entry form may be obtained by requeatlna Kodak Community Service Photoaraphy Award• CA3·77) from Baatman Kodak Company, Department 841!343 State Street, Roche1ter, New York, 14650. Por a prompt reply, Hnd a Hll•addrotHd bu1lne11 tiH envolopo.

The Ttl@!. N1 ..... A .... dlll.wlll "~4,'11 Roa.lon~1 Health Oonrerenae on Nov. 18·11 In Amarlllo'UtvoMna aeven atatea. The aue•t 1peaker1 will bi'Mra. Helen Cox, lnatruetor at t.he Methodltt. Hoapltal School of Nuralnsln Lubbock and Pre1ldtnt. of the Ttxu State Board ol Nuraln1 lllxamlnera.

Mn. Ceollll H•leiiiM will prtHnt htt: mu1lo rtOital at 8 p.m. Nov. 8 In Pre1ur Auditorium.

'1'111 Art .,.,....._., Ia •howlna ftlm1 evel')' Friday at 9 p.m., 11 p.m. and 8 p.m. In Townund Audl"rlum. Thoae film• art open " anyone who wlahea to attend.

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2 Response

By lhl SpefPta May students have full beards? I want to grow one, but I plan to 'keep it neatly ·trimmed.- J.S.

Dr. I>Qr~tby·l';:M~rinell, dean of the Center for Counselffit(~hel_~i:Jte.~nal S.~~ices, was not present to· answer-:-this question. But• Mrs. Nora Skaggs, Director- of. College·: Life;_ said. "Y:es, students. and facutty·memberslnay have full beards." There are no regulations that say otherwise, •• she added. Mrs.Skaggs said that there are no rules or regulatioDS pertaining to beards, mustaches, sideburns or hair length in the MH-B dress code. The accepted dress code is SGA Regulation D. page 21 of the MB-B Student Handbook. Skaggs also said that well groomed hair of any type will not be frowned upon. Why are the dorm room telephones limited to on campus calls only? Also, why does the campus switchboard turn off at 5:00 P.M. and why don't the pay phones on campus ever work? - J.M.S. and B.A.

"A few hurt many!" said Mr. Troy Hood. MH-B Comptroller. Mr. Hood said that until the dawn of 1 + dialing last year, controlled long distance c:alling was permitted, but after 1 + dialing came, many long distance calls were illegally . made. He also said that more than $300 in long distance calls were made until this privilege was taken away. He said that one student, who was caugh~. rang up a $74 bill and that these calls were charged to MH-B. Mr. Hood said ''The switchboard cuts off at 5 P.M. because of the inc~dent last year~" He .said that no "out of order" pay phone!!J have been reported to his office. He added that if any phone isn't. working properly, report it to him and it will be repaired. M:t. H~ also said that students may have their own private telephone, but must be obtained through the Southwestern Bell. Telephone Company in Belton. The rules con~rning telephones are stated in Administrative Policies and ~egulations, on page 8 of the MH-B Student Handbook.

NOTE-The MH·B Student Handbook is a very informative publication. Pick up your copy at the College Life office, third Door, Mabee S.C.

All reasonable questions pertaining to MH-B (campus life, programs, buildings, etc,) will be answered. Give your questions to Mr. Ron Hurt (office and publishing room, Ely-Pepper Hall) or any BELLS staff member.

By Mlehael WOllam• "'l'ho Fantastles," a musical comedy written by Tom

Jones and Harvey Schmidt, will bo presented on tho MH·B campus Jan. 81 and Feb. 1 as a cooperative effort between the Music Department and Alpha Pal Omega Dramatic Fraternity.

Suggested by "Lea Romantesques" by Edmund Rostand, the cast Includes Bobby Johnson as El Gallo, Carolyn Tlee and Margie Michaels as Luisa, Randy Clawson as Matt, Mark Siegworth as Huckabee, Wayne Spoonts as Ballamy, Douglass Hoppock as Mortimer, Eugene Saylor aa Henry, and Michael William• aa the Mute. Maraha Danllko Ia aaalstant to the stage director. Mr. Charlea (1, Taylor It Stage Director and Dr. Robert Smith Ia mualcal director.

The MH·B a.ptll& Stu .. •• ·oaloa I• aponaorlna a akatlng party from 8·10180 p.m. Nov. 19 at Skate Haven In Temple. The aoat Ia S1 per peraon. Tlcket.a can be bou1ht either a~ the door or at the Spiritual Life Center on oampua. The proceed• from thla endeavor will 10 to the State BSU Summer Mlaalona Propam.

Wuted1 Olrl• to play ba•ketball who aro wllllna to mako •acr1nc011 to play. Mla1 Franco• Harlo11, MH·BC Rlrllt bnllkOiblll Ctlach, laid thll tlrlt WhO Wlnt IO play mu~tt "'I" up:it CkiUdniin Oym by Nov. 14. Por more lnfnrnuulun, ~ntM-'1 Ml11 Harle11 at tho a~m.

"'1'111 C., tl~"• b~ Bll&abtth Btrryhlll, will be preuntiHI at 8 c·m· ov, t-10 In the MabH 8'udent Center. The adm ulon Ia 11 for adultt, eo oenw for atudent•, and frtt to t.h011 atudenta prtHntlnt JD card at the door.

Tilt ltlll publlahod weekly at Mary Hardln•laylor Colloae a1 part of tho atudent activity, Retum 1101taao auarantood. Entered at the Polt Offtco In Belton,

· Te•aa, a1 tocand·olail. matter under the Act of March 3, 1973.

Revival Perspective · By Betsy Aduis

The revival is over. Five nights of Christian fellowship and spiritual sharing have ended. The "Craig Morton" of the Dallas Cowboys, Jim Keith has left. The music man, Tommy Gillespie is also gone. "Wellspring" is well on their way to other singing engagements, other campuses. Yet what remains of the revival is a spirit on this campus. The revival is over; But the real· revival lives as anindividual revelation to each who shared it in the past week.

The evangelist, in one of his talks, pointed out that it is nqt what one sees of the revival now, but what happens next week. In a comment to one of the students Jim said Mary Hardin-Baylor campus is composed of many "lone rangers", those students who are not united with any social or professional groups.

"Will we be looking in from the outside?'' asked Jim, "or will we try to look from the inside out?"

Tommy Gillespie said this was his first encounter with a Baptist college. ''This eampus provides so many unique opportunities, some of which have never been used. In any Baptist college there is an advantage of close. friendship and opportunities for spiritual interchange."

The revival involved students. Students who eame with fresh ideas and new hopes of Christian unity. It will be the students that will change people and this campus.

The true test is time.

1 • .. 2 ... 3 • • • • By CbNiy Orda

The curtains were drawn. Darkness and silence · . prevailed.

A Japanese girl with a soft voice speaks to her subject, "Relax, just relax. Close your eyes. I'm going to count. to 60. After each number I want. you to repeat It to yourself. One, two, three ... fifty.'1

After the number 50 is said, her subject is in the world of hypnotism.

·Hypnotism: Is it evil'l Is it a form of Satanism? How can one control the mind of another?

To Naoko Inoue of Osaka, Japan, "Hypnotism is a scientific technique rather than an evil doing.''

Naoko's first hypnotic experience occurred when her younger brother was impressed with a T.V. special on hypnotism. Naoko's brother started to read books on tho subject. and decided he could hypnotize. He persuaded Naoko, a high schooler, to be hypnotized.

"During my first. experience of hypnotism, I was terribly afraid because I didn't. know what. would happen or how I would react. As I was hypnotized, my brother told me I WRI to obey him. He told me to lay back and I found myself doing so. I trlod to fight his command but It was hopeless," Naoko said.

Societies By BlaDe Pul!ft

To promote a deeper appreciation of literature, history, art and music and to foster ideals of friendship and loyalty have been the purposes of Royal Academia and Historical PhUa Societies.

For more than 80 years both societies played a large part in Mary Hardin-Baylor tradition.

Royal Academia Society had its beginnings at Independence. Dr. John Hill Luther, president of the college. during its early history; founded Royal Academia Society in honor of Dr. William Royall, one of the first presidents of Baylor College.

Following the transferring of Baylor College to Belton, in 1886, Miss Arta Bright, faculty member organized the Academia Society. Upon the request of Dr. Luth~r. the name Royall was added to the Academia and was considered a successor to the society organized at Independence.

Later procedures brought about the omission of one of the L's from the Royall.

Realizing a need for another society on campus,

Historical· Phila· Historical PhUa will present Sandra Coachman, a

1972 MH-B graduate, as guest speaker for the society chapel program on Nov. 13.

The Historical Phlla Society officers are Nancy Irvin, president; Cu:olyil 'rice, first vice president; ·.~rthy

Dunn, second vice~president; Kathi Foster, iecording secretary; Cheryl Moore, corresponding· secretary; Sherry. Balanger, alumnae secretary; Sandy Stre~gth. treasurer; Donna Curb and Sara Goodwyn, . music

co-chairmen; Janice Andrews, reporter; Sherry Jackson, keeper of the archives; BettY Reddell and

Naoko believes anyone tan be hypnotized. "People who have doubts about hypnotism are

usually the hardest. to hypnotize. In my experience Df hypnotizing, I found out that the Innocent ones are the easiest.," she said.

Naoko went. on to say, "For examr.Je I have an American family In Dallas. Tho couple 1 children are very young. They are young and unaware of what hypnot.111m Ia and therefore are easy subjects."

3

Hi.storical PhUa Society was organized in 1883 by Mrs. Elt Moore Townsend. The organization, Historical Society, was founded for the purpose of an interest in history.

In 1924 the society became a member of the State and National Federation of Women's organizations but later withdrew the membership during World War ll. At that time both societies decided to accept responsibilities as Junior Red Cross Organizations.

At the beginning of each school year the societies have a joint Freshman Recetption. In addition to this,

· Historical conducts a charm school and Royal Academia presents a night of rhythm and song.

The colors rmd pins of both societies are well-known symbols. Historical PhUa'scolors are crimson and gold. The pin is a gold "H" and a Phi encrusted with tiny seed pearls.

Royal Academia's colors, purple, gold, and white are of royalty. The pin is an open book and the lamp of knowledge surrounded by amethysts.

Royal Aca~mia Gayle Lindner sergeant at arms; and Merle Lucko, room sergeant. ·

·Royal Academia will present Nancy Jane Davis as guest speaker for the society program. She is a 1971 graduate · of . ~ary Hardin-Baylor College, and is presently restdmg in Port Arthur. Miss Davis was President of Royal Academia and Burt Dorm Chairman.

The Royal Academia officers are Donna Drew President; Joy Edwards, vice president; Pam Kein: secretary; Gloria Matson, treasurer; and Debbie Thomas, sergeant at arms, keeper of archives and parlimentarian. '

· Although Naoko has had several years of experience of hypnotizing she said, "My main fear is for a person unable to awaken. I've never had a bad experience as such but I always had and will always have that fear."

Naoko has noticed that people she hypnotizes are aware of their doings but are unable to do what they want to. Usually after their second or third hypnotic experience, her subjects may be unaware of their doings.

"It would depend on how strong a person is, emotionally. It may take a person three times, or thirteen."

Presently, Naoko has very high interests in hypnotism and hopes to receive a license permitting her to hypnotize.

Besides hypnotizing, the sophomore sociology major likes to Involve herself In everything from a beginners course In Spanish at Mary Hardin-Baylor College to playing the nute.

When asked If shq had experieMed any bud involvements with people about hypnotism Naoko replied, "I know some people consider hypnotism an example of black magic but I do believe in God. I place myself In God's hands to control myself. And I trust him."

The Day The Chapel Burned BJJ.YIIIt

It was a typical quiet Sunday momlna on the Mary Hardln·Baylor Colloae campus with moat of the students at local church aorvlco1. Suddenly around I 1: 15 tho noise of sirens broke the •lienee.

"The ftnt thlna I thouaht of was tho roast I had left In my oven," laid Mr1. Gtorala Roon, now Nll&trar'• 111iltant at MH•B .... J11en when they came In and called the MH·B malntenan01 director out of the service, I knew It wat a ftre at the .oolltle•"

Mn. lotn wu attendlna momlnl servloet ·It' Pint Baptltt Church, Belton, on Pebrua,Y 9; 1964;·when the oofleie'• Alma 111ves Chapel and · ·WIIaon Admlnlatratlon Bulldlna bumed to tho around. Houlld In the bulldlnl were the rtll&trar't offtoe, dean's offtoe, offtoe of atudtnt Hrvloea, butlnllt oflloe, publlolt~ department, alumni office, and departmenta of IOOtoloiY• rellalon, and )oumallsm. .

llreottd about 1901, the thret•ltory brlak and limestone aolonlalnruoture bumed within an hour. Thl cause of the blaae was not determined.

Plro Manhal Prank Hammer 11tlmated the lola at

1600,000 but the actual value of the content• lost could not be determined. All records since tho oolleae was chartered by the Republic of Texas ln 11145 wore deatroyod,

A 11fo contalnlna atudtat loan records, minutes of the tru1toe1' meetlnl•• ud 1150 In ouh was about the only thlna recovered 11'011 the rulna.

Duplloatlna work of all the academia recorda wu In proare11, but the dupllaatlna machine and copies already made ..,. dl~tNytd In the tire.

.The lou w" tMtW than Jult NCIDI'dt tncl document• tlioUah. '1:f.r.'' wal;d ' t.fii'CII', .. currently '"" of the . IIOOtolo · ' tnt at MH·B, lost tlvo yeara of work toward"l• .D. In the ftre, Hit preliminary e11m1 were llhldulld for that Ocltoblr.

M•y Of tht acldlmlo teeetrdt dlatroyed In tht tire have lletn rtOOnatr-.oted. lome lnltltutlon• which had traniCiriptl of Mary Hlrdln·llylor atudlntt, ant oopltt of the tran~ptl back to· t"e ooll•a• to help In noonatruatlna noordt. Othlr tormtr atudlnta retumtd aradt refOI'tt or delrll r'•n• of their. work at MH·B.

llvtral aradt boOk• o former prol1110rt were 1110

recovered, These were used In reconstruction when no other records could be found.

lmmodlatoly after tho ftre, tho admlnlstratlvo offtco1 'wore moved to tho nowly·remodoled Heard Hall where they aro located today,

Tho colloao's 1400,000 bulldlna proaram was lncroaaod to 11,000,000 by Proaldent Arthur K. Ty10n after the ftn. :A now chapel and spiritual life center wore completed ln tho 1prln1 of1967 a• an outarowth of that proaram.

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By Deal s.ldt Girl's volleyball can be, and often is, won in the

pre-game warm ups. In the fifteen minutes before every game the name changes from .vo11eybaft to intimidation.

The teams square off on opposite sides of the court in order to practice the fundamentals of the aame.

First there is the set shot. This is clone by the players in groups of five. Each member sends the ball as hiah into the air as possible to the nen player w.~_in tum lofts it to the neld.

After several suc:cessfUI rafter threadinJ set shots one player will slam the ball over the net, into a JIOUP of opposina players. They' ·are usually ~aht by surprise since they are intent on the ceiling while they too practice the set shot;

Nen, each team steps to the far end rA .the pmnaslum to practice savina.

Usually this. is done in a helter·skelter manner with each team randomly servlna slx ·or elaht bolleyballs. But one l:oach may see a chance to tum the exercise into additional domination of the other team, .She sends in 11 psyche-out play from the bench and suddenly her team beslns servlns eiaht or ten balls at once.

Most opposina teams will be sent Into Instant pandemonium u they try to catch and dodp the speed ina mlssles simultaneously, · .

If all else· fails and the opposina· team still retaiaa

Weekend •usic

ByJ ... Mix• AUSTIN

Nov. ll - Glenn Mlller Orehntra, Municipal Auditorium, 8:00 .-• .n., 4'78·5481, S5-ta.

Nov. 14-l'l- Tom T. Hall, 5251/• Barton Sprinp Road, 4'7'7.()855. ' ..

Nov. 18 - Lon1horn Band Outdoor Fntlval Coneort, Univeraity of Texas Art Bulldin1 South Terrace, 1130 p.m •• FREE.

DALLAS Nov. 12- St. Louia Jau Quartet, Eaatfltld Collep,

Performance Hall, '748-8181, St. . Nov. 28 - Roberta Flack, MemorialAudit.Orium,

8100 p.m., '742·8'714, Prea\on Tleket Apney. Nov. II - The Who, Memorial Auditorium,

'741·3'754, Prellton Ticket Apncy. POIIT WGaTII

Nov. l'l - Sha Na Na, Texaa Hall, UnlveraltJ of Texu at Arlln~ton. 1100 p.m., S4.110·U.IIO, 1'78-8101.

WACO ''· Nov. 10 - Ch&r~T Pride, Heart. of Texaa CollHum,

8100 p.m., Ticket• •·t4 at Glblona atom In Waoo and Poat. Special Sitrvlett at Ft. Hood. : · ·

AtJITIN Nov. ao- Unlvll'lltr of Texu VI. Barlor. Memorial

Stadium, 1100 P·"'·• If, Nov. 11 - UniYiralty of Teua "'' Te111 Ohriltlln

Univereltr. 1100 p.m., t1. ·DALLAl·

Nov. ll -Dallal Oowbor• va, Phllldtlphla. 1100 p.m., tl-11.

Nov. II - Dallal Oowbor• "'· MiaMI! 1110 p.m., ...... Nov. ao- Blllk Hawk• VI. AltHiqUifque, Llvellollr

Murff's Pitch ByMiehael Williams

Developing character is just as imp_ortant as developing the natural God-given talents ~ Baseball player bas according to Mr • ., . .l,Phn "Re~>fijffi, : Regional Scouting Director for ttie Montreal ~xpos. · ·

As a scout, Murff looks for the God-given talents of running, throwing, hitting, catching, an-!1 .the basic instincts of the game of baseball. . .

Though his official title is Assistant To The President In Charge Of Special Programs, Murff. is best ~own on the Mary Hardin-Baylor Campus for hts coachmg of the MH-B. Bruins Baseball Club, a new innovation in college athletics which he helped to devise.

"A player must learn to execute to the peak of his own ability those natural talents and perfect then," Murff said. Murff coaches the individual so that he can do this by not overcoaching. He allows the player to get out and play and tries to make as few major changes as po~sible in a player.

0" I I ••·• •,•• -•w-,,,, . ... . ,. ·• . . .. . .. . . .. - ... some order, the sPiting eercise is a sure "coup' grace". ,

The "spike" is equivalent of the "slam" dunk basketball. It requires a hiah leap so that when hand contacts the ball it wm drive it down ud the· net instead of horizoatally over.

The spike tequkes the baD .to· be a foOt. iitioVe tJie. and some m iaches behiad upoa contaet. This ai the spiker the chance to blast the ball into the defen fac, or position it out of his reach.

In practice however, this eun:ise turns into a g of dodgeball. One spike after aaotber caroms ami the opposbag players.

After warm-ups the game begins and whUe c:asusal observer may not have noticed, the ·WiDDer may already have been decided. ·

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"Red" has always been interested in Baseball. • 'As a baby, my mother said I could throw my bottle further than anyone else." He wa5·an'active player &om 1950 to 196q, ~-d-~~ :~eo)lted for the Houston .Colt 45s and the New'YorlCMets'befote· coming to the Montreal Ex.,Os:"' :~·· •:•· · ."·:!;···: :; · ..

There· ~ere a'lat 'of enjoyable moments during· his~ career: but Muiffbelfeves "the·greatest highlight eame in 1955 whe11 h~.was named Minor League Player of the Year by Sporting Ilfe\Vs. That year Murff had 28 wins and lllosses·. The next year he moved up to the Major Leagues. · · · ·

Murff's goals this year as coach for the Bruins are to learn to play the game of baseball as a unit and to win all games the team is supposed to win.

Murff is well liked and respected by all the players on the Bruin team as examplified by Jim Plant, first baseman, "Murlf gives the ball player a chance. He really lmows the strateiY and fielding of baseball well." ·

A Girl's Eyeview -....,..... '

It is wen pubflcized where ail the big leape stars come from. Tbe Ions traU for the players is thtouJh the buSh leagues to fame and fortune. Everyone on the field is accounted for, but perhaps the one that c:a11s the

~'t n::le.aia~ umpi!Cs come from? Certainly not off ttie' street. ·m reality they travel the same route as the players. 'lbey too journey thlouaht the minol' leapes. And like the players, only the cream get "a spot at the top".

An umpire's career all beaina with a drtytaa love. Perhaps u experience at a Uttle Leape aame inspired hlm. He decidu to ao to achool to learn the aame. "Florida bound" he revels iD the punaent odor of the

. dubhouae aad the ·areen rA the infield .• After lflduadoa, he pacts hla bq and travels With

the. rooldes. Towa to town, flom one ball park to the other, he calla the strikes. Sinal• A., Double A,· Triple A, .season after seuon, he cllllplltly preues b clarity of vllloa · ud uablued actlou.

A. thouNDd inniap later, his caD in th• majora may be wltneued by faDI ud pla,.n ud demoastrate his accuracy and knowledae of baaeball. If he Ia conlisteatly aooct there wlU be more towu ud mon · ball para. . .

Thus, for the umpire, the trip to the bla leape Is much lib the playen. Yet - the umpire ataada aloae on and off the field,

Nov. 18-:- Black Hawkl va:·Oklahonw;·Llvntoek: · · . . . . 81.~,.._ Coliseum, Fair Park, SI.IIO·f4.110, . Jeaua ~ Supefttlr, playlaa at the Showtown

BOUlTON Drive· In u an exc:lualve limited eDPiement, Ia one of ·Nov. 18...:.. Houlton Rocketa vs. Philadelphia, 8100 the moat controvenialloct Opera to appear on the

p.m., SS·S&,· Hofheln• PavUlon. theatrical acene. . KILLEEN Supentar hu been widely MICialmtd or MY~Niy Starli II Stripe• SpeedwaJ, Qtr. Mile Oval Clritkbled for It'• 1torJ coatnt .,_dina oa how the

DirtTrack, Racn every Sunday at 1100 p.m., ptn vlewerlaterpNU lt. Pew PIOIM have tan the timt to open at. 11180 p.m., adulta t1 and ehlldren tl. eumlae Ita value 11 a lilovle bald oa perfonaaaet

Two mllel on old Copperaa Cove Rd. · nierlta.

til I. Sbaalaa Ia one of tht 11101t lmportaat futDn of

lliil t::::':,:: =,.: = = :.... "a=-~ AtJITIN I outiq. "Love Ia A Time Of DaJ", Country D nner Juclal, the leld, Ia Gill of tht ltfGaant ahii'Mtlrlia

PlayhouH, Alan Sun.0

:81. thtiiiOYit llld hu beta ...... ,, ponnyect. Not only Ia

hll voiN eutlleat for the Ill• wt the,... ............. "A Thouund Clown•"• Granft1'• Dinner Plarhoult, ud t~octr lft0¥elftlatl all It topthtr to form a

Bob Denver, •.oum; h~r~~~~aioaa .,... of an. · . "How The Other Half Lovea", Oounti'J Dinner n. tide role of Jnuala flthir a dlllppolatmeat, The

Plaf_houH, Han• Conrltd, 181·MI1 • ' Mtar partnylnl the Chtllt ll lOt ule to ....,.. ·.al the "Forty Oarata", Windmill Dinner Playhou11, IIOhla udle ll.obvloua that he hu ._ ~ Ia

Virpnia Mayo, 881·1104. · lfllq to llltrpret the role, OM of the 1101t ~ llt.,....doaa of 1 role ia the all..-.r t1 ·Ptiada ....... ' •,

The o,alcliM· dllt la .0 obvlou ln the ftnt ""'OM huof I'Uitt \t ohlllalcl to OM offtar WMa tMIIOWdl

I ~If. far •the Oftlllllloa if QHitt ''• .............. , ,, ......... ~.,the .. tNt .... ' ............. laof ... - ualltJ, AMehlr .... .... ,.:::,.,.., filii :r:r.z. ......... llood

.t ~ .... ~a,':'"-a- .................. ..... I~TON ' It the IIIUMt ..._ Mtltlq .. .,..,, ,_. ..... to

8111 P'lnt Artl AIIOIIatlln'• An!Wil Ohrii&Mu 'An ... the "'"" tltMr 10111 1H taU awar ,._ lt't llle, Nov.IO, Die, 1 61a' t.h1 8111 riM AN ClnMr. llliMt• . ·

. ·.· WACO _ '1111q11 ....... 111 ........ Ill I81U1 Qlflle WHD RIIIWI Art. llhlltltloal. Nov• lloDat.·l. .... .....,,ltlla_,lld_.. ..............

aar• Unlverlltr llrlor Aft ualllrT In .._., ~'eo lie 011 of the all *'"" .,.... • the _. ._. If ......... u..... '

-------------........... ...,,.,,"""""'"'~~~'~'~uiWII:I---••••za•"•••"'::.""'t'!lm.~W-tm!ili''!SIMWIWIIREIEL•as•ziJ············IIl!JJIIh!ft,.M

. ByJ~~ .... ~~-~:-~_:::-=.:-~.-=:~?~~. Scott and White Hospttil of Temple, Te:us· is·.often .. ·.:: ·: .. - · ··

referred to as the:Mayo clinic of.tbe soutbwe&t;-Ifliu· :::::: gained national ac.ctaim for. itS 4!j:icellent facilities. and ~ .. for its treatment of cancer.: patients: · ·: · . ·: :

The hospital wu toiuutect bjsevent doctors who had. worked with the·l;lajo Clbii~iii:ROcheiter, Miiiiiescita;: It is patterned a~· t~-:--Mayo clinic· iii that~iFii: a research center ua~ clln~c~ " patho)o~-- ~-~]b.~~ .. __ -·.· hospital is credited-With classifylilg varioua type~·o' . cancer. . ·. ·.. . . .. --~--- -··- ·

Patient~ are referred to ~tt :and White-~ fiOm ·. :···. hospltali·a)i over the woild. Maily coine frOm .Muieo · and countries from· South America. MOitof-the~pitients . come from· the · ftve·.statea surroundirii the stste-'of Texas.

In addition to ita research and clinical ac:tlvlties, Scott and White also provides Mary Hardin-Baylor nunina ltudents with learnlns experiences ln all major clinical areas. Much of the work that a student nurse must complete Ia performed In the Scott and White facUlties.

The Scott and White Nuraina Department propam for student nurses Ia accredited by the Te•a• Board of Nurse Examiners. Students who· aucceaafuUy complete the course are ellJlble to write the board for licensure u reatstered nurses.

The proJfam provides the student nurses with tralnlna and aperlenco In medical·suraical, maternal, pediatric, psychiatric, and community health nurslna.

The MH·BC nunia1 atuclents beCome famUiar with Scott and White in their 10phomore year when they blain their flnt aurtlna ooune. By their Hnlor year, the student• are apendina twelve to el1hteea hours per week at the hotpltal,

The Scott and White aunlna service• department baa a propam whereby the ltudentl can earn an tltra income and aain e~q~~rleace by worklal at the h01pltal after aohool houn. · ·

Karen lelake l1 a 11nlor nunln1 ltUcltat in the proaram. She i1 th•r.:•ldtat of the MH·B ohapter of the Studnt Nunn aiOOlattoa, She btltevea tfiat tt,e tralnlna at SCIOtt and White II tiOIIItat 111d II very enthuaiutlc about the planud 11queace of the oounn.

Ia cliiOI'Iblll the oounn, Kana Aid, "Many oolltlll atrer an. lnteplted aunln1 .,........ MII·B and Soott and White ha,ve outllMd ·~ _1tap1 of tralnlnt for the ttudlat. Jlln, the ltacllat 111nt1 the fundameatlll 111foN prooeedlna to medlaal·•ur,aoal nunlna." · ·. 1• · · '·"

Karen wUI 111 oae of tht many MH·B aunlaj' • 1tudeat1 who wUI work at loau aad Whl. ""'I lht aompllttt her tralalu, ~ of.th1 Malor =· . ··. ltudlnte have ,..,, ... ICIIIolltlhlPI ,_ till, :: an~ wen .. llllt •• ,.., It thl holpltll lftW-' .,....... . . .

Tht MR·I · aunlq. ~t II die ..... ........ . on -~· IN aul'l'lltlr 196

· ltudtntl·~-~ Ia ..... liN ~· · .. , Hlnll, -· ~ ......... of ...... Tllll

kucllntNIInll AlloOiitlla .......... Mll•l ..... •DioYM• .. LVN It ·llltf ... Wh .... HI WIIMI thlithiMH•II ......... tllllllvtlt ..... allllf• ............. alliloll fll!don ....... --iltl ,_ ... other - ,.., ...... Ia .......... .

a student publication ot mary hardin-baylor

h-lday, nov. 18, 19T8

.. _ .. ·-··--· .. _ .. __ -.:.,---h~· ;.:. ____ ·a·· ---- d--.;..--::==-··-~ · .... c_:.:·· ·~a-

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~--·---· ... --.------······----------·-··-- ·-- ·--

. - .. ---------...... -·~·· ·-··-··- ··----.- ..

~ -- . ~ --

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' ' ' J lJliLllL

Copper· ByJeya..t

The next time you see campus patrolman Eddie Green making his rounds, give him a friendly smile or 1 wave. He's a nice guy.

"My farst love is Mary Hardin-Baylor," said Green, "and I like to do the best job I can for them."

A member of the Belton police foree, Green has been assigned to be ehief security officer on the Mary Hardin-Baylor College campus for the put three years. He was assigned to MH·B immediately after completing police academy training at Central Texas College in KUleen. ·

Green patrols the campus five days and two nigh~ a week. His job is to control traffie. secure buildinJS, and inveltigate aetividea. He abo eheeb puking permita-moetly during the day-and ~ .. a~eya on atop signa. . · · · · :- : ' . -

Green il reaponaibJe for watebing the doora and windowa of dormitoriel and oblervia1 the type of peraona on eampua. If a crowd pthen, Green ehMka to aee if are or hoatlle.

The Creative SenSe .,._ ..... A smUe may aeem llke an anutual teachlal

lnatrument ln a collep creative wrltln1 clua. But combined wlth friendly crltklam and an atmosphere of open dlaloaue, lt can aometlmet help ltudeata aceept thelr abUlty to create. .

The amlle belona• to Mn. Mary Lona ud the creative wrltlna clua lhe teachea Ia only one outlet for her lntereat ln the creative artt. Aa presldeJtt of the Centnl Texat Poetry Society, Mn. Loaa'a creative uraea coven wrltlna poetry aa well u teachlnl h.

Mra. Lona explained that after atteadlna a worklhop ln poetry wrltlna the and a tmallpoup ettabllahod the central To1u chapter of the Poetry Soolety of Te1u.

"We reallud our lack of backaround ln poetry and we wanted to form a aroup for all aaet. Our 1~ It to enable ttudenta to be acquainted with recopl&ed ~t• ln the ttate throuah partlclpatlon In a localaroup, ' the atld. .

Althouah Mn. Lona occulonally partlclpatea In the mectlnaa by roadlna aome of her own poetry, the aald that abe had never written a poem until after tho beaan teachlna creative wrltlna.

"After I had one Hmeater I nall&od I couldn't

He tries to do something different on each of his rounds 80 a potential lawbreaker cannot depend on a set patrol routine.

During his three years as chief security officer, Green has made about 180 arrests on the Mary Hardin-Baylor campus. He has given about 175 city traffic. ti~ets -but has given so many on the MII·B eampua that he. has lost c:ount. ·

"I appreciate when people .watch the rules and regulations," Green said. "I don't like to give tickets, but I will when neeeaaary.'' .

During his spare time, Green is a fisherman and hunter~ He alao enjoys football and bueball. Before becoming a plieeman Green ·owned a repair busineu in Belton~ · ·

. Green said he wu .. pleuantly aurpriMd" at the alow buaineu on the MH·B eampua thiaMIIleater~ "lt'a been very calm," he uid, "aDd moat people have tried to comply with the ruin." · · : . :

"Thil work Ia aU interutinl to me," he aaid. ·'1: Jove but I don't let· that interfere with work."

teach a c:oune If I didn't pracdee what I taupt-ao that aummer I wrote my tint poem," the aaid. Mn. Loq

Lady .,..,... ..... The Lord 11 my aheperd, I aball not wut, He munh me to II)' don Ia """ putuna ... He leadeth me btaldl atlll .watm ...

Data thlt ptaHII brln1 back memorllt of earl)' momln1lunday achool dayaf Or maybe crammln. for 1 nllaloft mld·tmnf Por Mn. Lorlna Connally, the 'lacl)' ln the boobiore", thlt ICrlptun hold• a much deeper meanlftl•

In 1954, when her youn111t aon, Jamea, waa thl'll yoart old, Mn, Connally became 111. BttwHn 1954 and 1959, the had fourteen oporatlona, HYeral of whloh the wa• not e1pocted to live ·thro111h•

"Boforo turaery I would alway• ropoat the 23rd

Plalm. Bach tiM I would au God to let 1111llv1 to 111 my ohlldnn 1fGW11Ud.hlve thltredpqadoa,'.'·lh~ . ..w.

. Mn. Connally hu worUd fDr WH·IC fDr ~~vet~ ud Olll•hllf .. )'tlrl ud MWI' hid to apply ., the job, lftltead Dr, T, .A • .,._Hilly oillld 111r 0111 du and uUd If lht had uy lntlflltl In .lolnbll the WH·I

· flmUy. Althoulh ahe hacl 1 Job u Ollhllr at the time, lh1

followed ·her lntultlcm ud joined the houllkH~ftl departmlftt It MH•Io It Wll IIVH. )'lift later, that Mn. Connally ltartecl · workln1 u ouhltr for the bookltort after the fol'lner oaallllf blcam• 111.

Mn. Connall)' prtfen htr work In the bookttore btcautt the It able to be more cloHI)' aaiOClated with ttudonta, faoult)', and admlnlttratlon.

.2

.Sieg Hiel By DaaDeaeLoW~. '

Sieg Hell !Thirty years ago this salute fitled the world with terror. On Nov. 9-10 that terror was once again felt in the Lillian Shelton Theatre. An audience, chilled by the weather and the Nazi aura in the atmosphere of the theatre, watched and listened as the elrama of Dietrich Bonhoffer unfolded in Elizabeth Berryhill's ''The Cup of Trembling."

Overcoming technical problems of loud sound effects, noisy scene che,nges, and we.at voice projection, the eight member. cast brought life to Ms. Berryhill's play. One performance, that of Dou~as Hoppact, is of particular note. He portrayed Erich Friedhoffer, Bonhotfer renamed, Erich was a Lutheren pastor in Germany who joined a plot to assassinate lfitler. Through Mr. Hoppoeks excellent portrayal, the audience empathized with the inner struule, the anguish, the fear - the "cup of trembling" - that Erieh experience. Mr. Hoppoet had full control of the stage, the emotions of~e play, and the emotions of the audience.

Perhaps the most beautiful icieiae' iD the play is the mountain climbing ICf!llC· Here . Eri~. Fritz (Randy Clawson), and Ernst (Michael Williams) show the sensitivity and spiritualneaa of the entire play.

On the technical aide thia play .ehallenaes the audieneesimasination with "' three level acting areas, unit presentational aets, and llahtiaa aad aound. To uperlenee the air raid sceDe is to eaperience fear.

Laat, but eertalnly DOt ·least, is the laqe blaci ClOSS

suapeaded over eeater atqe. It .is there when Erich teaches his funDy splrituala, when be bldea from the Nazi's, when he prays, aad when be dlea. Alway there; alwaya conataDt. _ .,

BDil'OilS NOTE :- "The Cup of Trem~liaJ ... ~.niJ be prelellteCI apia oa Tuesday Nov. 20-1a.a.lpedal COIIUII&Dd perfonDaace. F• thole who waat to bow what Cbrladalllty ..... aad IJr thole who have already nperlenced ~ we llope you wUl tale tbil opportualty to .... thil.very. moviDa .....-.

atudled creative wrltlD1 Ia oollep aad WIOte -"ral lhort stortea. Smlllal, abe aald that her teacller raUed the clua ator1ea from one to twnty·llve ad that bon were always Ia the tweatlea. . · · . · Oa the oontemporary ~CeDe Mn. Lon1 eajoys black poetry aacl "eapeclally ladi&D poetry,

• 'I've bela tryln1 to pt toaether a ClOIIectlon of ladlaa poetff. Tho rhythm ud lmapa of llidl.aa poetry are very dlfterent from othar ethnic poupa."

She aald that althouah pabllthed ladlan poetry illtlll hard to ftnd, more Ia beatanlna to be publlahod becauH of omphult the lut few yean oa different cultural poupt.

Mn. Lona bellovea that "every penon Ia born with the ablllty to be creative althouah the lift po11lbly varlea In depee-but tho potential la there.

"Children have the moat creative approach to llfe in aenoral. If we can 10 back Into childhood and 100 with tho eyoa of a child our wrltlna wlll be more alive and vibrant."

In her creative wrltlna clua and u prealdent of tho Central Te1u Society Mn. Lon1e1ompllftet her belief Ia to be creative by b11ildlll1 an

and ·

•I

I I

Kaleidscope. '11le ...... EDID SeW.Ie has been released by Dr.

William Anderson. Students are to contact the Vice-President of Academic Affairs if they miss an eum due to illness and secure an excuse. There wUI be a S10 fee for all makeup enms and for those taken early. The enm schedule is as follows: a... . '£DID 'l'bite .,... 8:00 MWF classes- 8:30 a.m.-11:30 a.m. 12/13/73 9:00 MWF classes- 8:30 a.m.-11:30 a.m. 12/14/73 10:00 MWF classes- 8:30 a.m.-11:30 a.m. 12/15/73 11:00 MWF classes- 8:30 a.m.-11:30 a.m. 12/17/73 12:00 MWF classes- 8:30 a:m.-11:30 a.m. U/18/73 8:00 1TH classes -1:30 p.m.-4:30p.m. 12/13/73 9:30 1TH classes -1:30 p.m.-4:30p.m. 12/14/73 1:00 1TH classes -1:30 p.m.-4:30p.m. 12/15/73 2:30 1TH classes -1:30 p.m.-4:30p.m~ 12117/73 1:00 MWF classes- 6:00 p.m.-9 p.m. 12113/73 2:00 MWF classes- 6:00 p.m.-9:00p.m. 12/14/73

Night classes will have final examinations at their regularly scheduled meeting time, beginning the week of December 3, 1973.

The holiday ICIIedale for the Administration and Staff Personnel bas been approved. 'lbankspving holidays will bepn at 5 p.m. Nov. 21 and end at 8 p.m. Nov. 26. Christmas holidays wiU bepn at 5 p.m. Dec. 21 and end at 8 p.m. Dec. 27. New Year's holidays will begin Dec. 31 and end at 8 a.m. Jan. 2, 1?74.

Weekend .,J_M'-theatre

AUS'l'IN "Love Is A ·Time Of Day", Country Dinner

Playhouse, Alan Sues, 836-5921. I'OftBOOD

"Tbe Last Gf the Red Hot lAwen", Pt~ Hood Commualty Theatre Dbuaer Theatre, Hldeway Supper Cub, Nov. 27·29, Keservatiou 685-4244.

cin111a · .01 ....

Nortblide Cinema I · "Tbe Prieada of Eddie Coyle" ·oAU.AS . .

NorthpUl Cinema- ''Joaathim Uvlllptcm Seapll'' DMPU

Arcadia - Nov. 11-20, Gatlide Mali, NoV. 21·:14, Brothen O'Toole -

Teua.- Nov.11, Kando, Tbelloaaltoaa Cat, Nov. 21·24, M•A•S•H

Response ., .... ........ W'WIIdleh ........ tedle·A._Ie .... .._

·····'-···· Mill Rachel LaRoe, chairman of the Math and Phyaica deputmnt, , Hid that the whhe oolumned bulldina nut to the Adminiatratlon bulldina la Perauaon Hall. BuUt u a dormitory ln 1917, it later arved u the "Colleae Infirmary", "The preant Adminlatration bulldina wu once a dorm too. Then, ICI'Hned aleeplna p,orchea between the two bulldlna• kept students cool, • said Mitt LaRoe. She added that Perauaon Hall wu remodeled into an apartment bulldina durln1 World War D. Ml11 LaRoe 1110 said that today the MH·B owned apartment bulldina housea retired oolleae employ•• and po11lbly a atudent oouple. .., ......... ....., ................... ...... ...... .....,wllllt-J,p,

11AII .. I" aafd Dr. NiohoiiOII, director of admlnlatra· tivellfYlcn, "It atop• up the aubmerpblt pumpa and cau11a them to burn out." ·

He Hid that all the pumpa n burntcl out and rtpiiCIImnt pumps are VlfJ llpl81i¥t. Dr. NlclloiiDI alto Hid that otMr oalll .. bUtlMU taPI priolttJ, but an lltlftlltl way of pumptna the watlf ll Hlnl WotUcl out. . ,... ............ .,....._, ......... .. ,., ............... .._ .. )., ....... ,_ T, M,

A oampua hlttorlan, Miaalaohel Lalot, Chairman of the Mathematlctand PhJ•In ~•nt, llld that all th• bella on oampua WIN onae fUnattonll. Mlu Laloe aatd that thl two bella, now located ln the bill tower near Walton Chapel, wert brouaht'to lllton from thl orlatnal oampul It lndt""'dtnat, Tl .. lo "Thl lown bill it now broken, but at lndependtnoe both wert uHd 11 aohool bella,'' abe added. Milt LaRoe utd that the

The A....a MB·B 'l'llallqlvlq ....._wiD be at 6 p.m. Nov. 20 in Hardy Dining Hall. .

Guests are invited to attend. All dormitory students that have meal cards will be admitted free. All ·day students and guests may purchase tickets in the bookstore. Day student tickets are SO cents and guest tickets are Sl •.. ,

The Cap e1. TreiBbllaa wUI be presented again at 8 p.m. Nov. 20 in the Mabee Student Center Auditorium. . Admission is tree to MH-B students With ID cards and tickets are 51. for adults and SO cents for ·other students.

Elaht hi '1'lleta members and Mrs. Judy Lusk will attend the Texas Home Economics Student ·Section Workshop in Fort Worth Nov. 15-17. Reverend Bill Anderson wUI speak on "How to Have a Good Fight at Your Home."

The MeODd food lervke supervisors course will bepn Dec. 3, 1973. The classroom training wiU be from 2-5 p.m. on Mondays in room 210 Wells Science Building. The cost of the course will be 580. Completion of the course wUI prepare the student to become a member of the Hospital Institutional and Educational Food Service Society.

'l'lle IINia Baelld a.b and the Bruin Brigade are having a ~al Nov. 30, at the Bruin Baseball Field.

art BELTON·

BeD Fine Arts Auociation'a Allnual Christmas Ad Sale, Nov. 30, Dec. 1 & 2 at the BeD fine· Arta Center.

DAU.d ·-"The Sculpture of Thailand"·, Dallu Museum of

Fine .Arts, Nov. 21-Jan. 6. &bibition of more than 80 objects telectecU10m major 1'hal muteuma and .private oolleedoal and deslpated 11 NatiODal treasures.

WACO Waco lqloaal Art l!ddbltion, Nov. 18-Dec. 5,

BaJ.Ior. Ualvenlty .Art ; o..t1erJ. ln Moody Memorial Utinr, ..... , .. . . .

AVI'I'IN ·. Nov.16o17, Tom T. Hall, $25~ Barton Sprlnpload,

477-0355. Nov. 18, Loqhorn Band Outdoor Feltival Concert,

Unlvertlty of Teua .Art BuUdlna South Terrace, 1:30 p.m., nEE

bell that llalttlna nea.to ..._ aeiibo oace nna from the porch of Ely-Pepper Hall. She alto uld that thlt bell wu runa for quiet hour, llaht• out and when the HDlora left campus for the lut tllne. Mlat LaRoe uld that Ely-Pepper Hall wai oaoe owned by the Cottqe Roane System and uHCI u a woddaaatudntl donn. "Mn. Bill Moore Town1111d (Townand Memorlll Ubruy) and the Cottaae Home Syatem provided houllq for atudenta that wert workina on aoholanhipa, '' uld Mill LaRoe. She also aald that women oould work their way throuah oolleae oontrary to the belief that a woman'• place is tn the home, Mill LaRoe added that thla wu a tint in a world that frowned at womtn who wanted a colleJit education. Ia ............ W ..... a.,.l ....... bt N.IDIM .... ... ,., .... , ....... c-............. .....

3

There wUI be a 25 cent admiuion at the entrance aate. Ever)'one is invited to attend. ,

·TSEA'• Cllllafz s T• honoring members who graduate in December will be Dec. 3 in the h~e of Mrs. Bridges. All members wUI receive a letter with more informatiOn. TSEA will not have another regular

· meeting until February of next year. · Stadeat Goveruleat .A.saeh.., reception will be at

7 p.m. Nov. 19 in the old coffee house in the basement of Ely Pepper. Folk music will be presented by Kevin Schrum, from Fort Hood. . 5l&lu Alpla IMa is.sponsoring a Blood Bank from 9

a.m. to 3 p.m. Nov. 19 and 20 in the Faculty Lounge in the Student Center. PersoDDel from Scott & White Hospital will be in charge.

Tile A.._ VIRal Aida Department bas set new hours for open use. Equipment is available for use by faculty and st.udents. Everyone must provide all other materials needed.

Monday, Wednesday, and Friday- 8 a.m. - 12 nooo and 1-4 p.m.

Tuesday and Thursday- 9 a.m.- 12 noon and 1-3 p.m.

Saturday - 9 a.m. - 1 p.m. Dr. J.avene 0.0..., Chairman of the Nursing

Department, has been elected by the faculty to represent Mary Hardin-Baylor College for .the Piper Professor.

DAU..U ~- 16, "Marriage of Fiaaro", Dallas Civic Opera,

State Pair Music Hall, Performances also on Nov. 18 & 20.

Nov. 23, Roberta Flack, Memorial Auditorium, 8:00 p.m., 742-.3754, Preston Ticket Apncy.

·Nov. 25, 'lbe Who, Memorlai Aucliior\um, 742-3754, Preston Ticket Apncy.

I'OilT WORTH Nov. 17, Sha.Na Na, Teua Hall,'Unlveralty of Teua

at Arllapon,. 8:00 p.m. 14.50-SS.SO, 273-3101.

w· ~ '

A111'1'1N Nov •. 17, Unlvenhy of Teua VI. Tau ChrittiaD

Uatvenity, 2:00p.m. DI.£BN

Stan & $~pea Speedway, Qtr. Mile Oval Dirt Track, laces every Sunday, at 2:00 p.m. wlth aatea openlna at 12:30 p.m., adultl S3 and chUdren Sl. Two mUn oa Old ·- Cove ld.

.Open House Hlatorlcal PhUa and Royal Academia Socletlea

presented the annual Open Houa from 3·5 p.m. Nov. 11, ln the Mabee Student Center for thou people ellalble and plannina to pledae a aoclety Nov. 16-19.

Hlatorical Phlla Soolety prennted a proaram on llfe and the aociety, in Lilllan Shelton Theater. The theme for the proaram waa "Look To This Day."

Royal Academia Sooiety choae "Beina You" u the theme for their proaram. The aociety propam waa preanted in the Ro)'al Academia Room In Mabee Student Center.

W..._ a.,.l,-1, 1 .... Y, 1 • Dr. Samuel Nlcholaon, Dlreator of Adminlltrative ~================::; Strviaea, tald that einat Walton Chapel wu bullt ,.

I'ICiftdy, to hit kllowltdp thtrt an no plana ln the near flltun to rtdlooratl. Dr. Parker wu not avallablt to aniWII' thlt queatloa. ·

Dr. J, A. IIJnolda, Chairman of th• Ill....,. Dtpu.tmnt, Hid that laptllta don't 10 for aymbof1 of any klnd ... To lapdita, a 01'011 ~·ta • diad Jnu~

··artM, butChtltt.ll IMia," Ill Ald. Dr. I~JMidlllto utd 'th" hit Mlaht haVIltln Oftl NIIOII why I 01011 w1111't tNCitid. Dr.,.,_.. Aid that ht dolan't bow lf hi WOIIld hiVI luullttd I Oftlllt lf hi WIN Oft dll Chapel lulldlna &m•lttll. Mr. Bl•er Hera, Chalnnaa of the Chapel luUdln1 Com•htll In 1166, · now 1lvtna ln llltaa, aould not bi aontaoted to uk If i cro11 wu planntcl for,

All reaaonablt qulltlo•• ptrtalniaa to MarJ Hardln·laylor Colltp (oampua 1111, prolfaml, build· ina•• Ito.) will bl anawtrtd. Olve Jour qu11tlon1 to Mr. Ron Hurt (offtae and publlahina room, lly·Pepper Hall) or any BILLS ataff member •

The· Bells Publlthtd wiiMy at M~ Hardin•BI)'Ior Colllp II

put of the atudlnt aotlvity, llturn ~, ... IUaraatHd. lnttrtcl It tht POit Oflloe ia 811ton, TIIU, II 1100ad·olua matter under the Act of March 3, 1973. Bdltor,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,Bvt11n lmhh Ntw1 Bdltor,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,'Dian• ParUr ~ lclltor,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,CI~d~ Ortll 1~1 ldltor ... ,, .. ,, ... ,,,,,, .... , ..... ,,, .. , Mike Wllllama Alllltant lporta ldltor ....................... Norrla Pruler Photoar~pher,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,Ricky Boalea

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Hall Of Feiner Dr. Lewis M. Hllley, chairman of the Health and

physical Education Department at Mary Hardin-Baylor College, was one of the first twelve men recently elected Into the Lamar University Cardinal Hall of

. Honor. Dr. Hilley was honored with the other selectees Nov.

10 at halftime of the Lamar-Louisiana Tech football game In Beaumont.

Chairman of the Physical and Health Education Department at Lamar from 1955·62, Hilley also served as Director of Athletics from 1951·62. :

Durlna hla tenure at Lamar, Hilley coached the Cardlnala to 11 Lone Star Conference titles In tennia. His tennis teams also won six NAJA titles, 1 NCAA title and one World's lntercolle11iate tltle. .

In addition to his tennl• record at Lamar, Hilley alto won nine Lone Star Conference title• in aolf and two ln basketball. Hiaaolfteams alto won ftve NAIA title• and one realonal NCAA title.

Dr. Hilley came to Mary Hardin· Baylor in 1971, Since comlna to the colleae he hal started men'• lntercollealate tennis and aoll teams. Hilley alto started a baseball aport's club.

He received a B.A. dearee from Baylor In 1940 and a M.A. from tho Unlveralty ofTexaaln 1947.1n 1955, he received a doctorate from the Unlvenlty of Texu.

Meat On· The Hoof a,a..,w-.

Color, excitement, cheerin1 fane. Thl1 la collep football. Bveryone know• the excitement· a collep 11amo can aenerate. But how many tlm11 an we allowed a allmpll of the tralnlnl and won that pea lnto maklna a ohamflon team t

In M•• till IIIII, Gary Shaw 11U1 you behind the acen11 ud tella of hla four rean u a Te111 LOIIporn. Mally ofthtlnoldentt he rtlatet are.._...., .... are llmolt unbelievable, and all of thlln IN fntlfeltlq,

Gary Shaw went to Te1u 011 a· laotlllll ICihallrllltl' after a sUcotllfulhJP IChool faotball oarter, He -lou11d that hi• put noord lftNIIt llllthtu to the '"" olalllllll• Por the flrtt ""'"*" tliiJ ••••••• theMIIIYII Ia hulq tiel hlltMn, Wlln hi ... ... tfllalftlhtfotlndthat It Wl8 ................... .... llrutal. ' ' '

lhaw dlll1 with tht CIOIGIIII ..,.,...., ..,, .. dltiQ,

Love- that forec which changes lives, moves men to great deeds, and causes them to sbe.d their inhibitions and fears to unite in a common cause.

For The L Love was put into action Tuesday night Nov. 13 as the ove Alph• Phi Omega "Frat Rats" took on the Faculty "Fatties" in a benefit basketball game for Vemon

Of Vernon

Girls Eye View . By Sluld)' Plut

People such· as Amotd Palmer and Jack Nichotaua have become symbols of pro aolf those past yean. And if you're like me, it's never occurred how they aot there. For all I knew Amie and Jack just decided one day to join the competition.

Recently however, I found out that the playen we see on tolevition don't just walk in and tee otr. !J'here are specification• that a player must meet ln order to join the Profe11lonal Golfen Aatoelatlon.

Pint, the playen have to prove their abUlty to pay their ftrtt year'• expen••· Uaually, thla lt about 120,000. The playen must either have the moaey themHivea or havo a "backer", who wltl put up the money. ·

Then the playen mutt attend a Hrlea of qualiMna roundt. The top playenin theN roundtp to the,PGA

He ahowa Pat Culpepper u a dedicated man who putt playen throup touah and aom1tlm11 lnjurloua drlUa. Lan Hewlett• the 11braln ooach", he lhowa u havlna little lnter11t In a player' a atud)' oourie other than the aradea he ncelv11. Prank Medina, the trainer, oonduoted Hlllonl that came to be kaown u ••tortuN driUa", . , .

Meske Jr. of Troy, a young man·wbo bas undergone a successful kidney transplant at great risk and great cost ..

· 5750 was raised as the result of conc:cmed people who took as their common goal the plight of this young man. An atmosphere of love imd Christina concern was evident in all the planning: and the execution of this APO project.

Mrs. Minnie Henderson, sponsor of APO, said, "'Yfe are very grateful to all our friends, faculty and students who joined us in this effort to help in a small. way the Meske family."

player'• school. The best playen in tho achool araduate to fill the open space• for rookie• on the PGA tour.

The araduatet receive their PGA card and tho remalnin1 mull$ walt until tho next y~ar to try and 110t their card. ·

Once the player receive• hie card, he must qualify for the open "rookie" 1pot1 on each toumament. If the player quallftea (mukea the out), he Ia exempt from quallfylna for the next tournament.

At the end of the first year, a rookie aolfer will be exempt from any further qulllfylnalf he ia a.mona the top 60 playen on the tour or lf he hu won a tournament.

So as you aan see, the road to ltardom ln profeatlonal aolf 11 not an eaay one. It took a lot of money, talent and tlme-evon for Jack and Arnie. · .

The coaohea knew how to aet the beat out of their productive pla,en. Shaw reoalla IIVIt'allnoldntl when he wa1 puthed almolt to the point of Nbelllon, only to have the coach auddenly drop the matter Juat before he reached hl1 bNUlal point.

Darrell loyal, or .. Daddy D", Wll of ODUrH thl filii authority. lhaw deiiCI'lbn hlln u a man who la • IOOCI oraanlur and paiMIIII' a Cllltlll oiiUM. Thla allum, however, C1U. be turned off ud on It wUI, ud I& Ia ... ....... , off to the plapn. ,

Shaw u111 the oommanta of MVeral of the m111 who WIN hl1 te1111111te1 and of r.layen of other tum• to vlltiJ hl1 deaorlptlon of col IP football; hveral tell ltarila ofnt....,lajurln and the dlflaultr of aetdil to ....... .,,... wtrt --- .......... ·-- o1 the .lajurln GOUld havt ..._ fltll II lift uatrHtld,

OH thiaa·lltaw ondciiM II the WIJ till CIOICIHI would trr to lit. uadlalratlle ,..,.,. to 1M up thllr

· lllhollflhipi, --.eoau• of the llllltld .auiablr of fuU .... ........................ ...,.. ... put ....

.. ::::-.&;~-·to .... .,.; tM ,. ...... of ••

. I I I . I I I i!lii

.... ~ .... ...,....,,. ..... ...., ... ,or .... .... ,... ... ,. ... , .............. 1 •••••• , ... . ~~~ ........... '"* ~~ ~ .............. . ruutRlllltllllllutiwiNii.Jor ...... Ill 8ell, ~ ... .................... to •.• ., ......... . ........ ,, . . '

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Pre1ident Richard M •. Niaon aald In hl1 Stlte of the Union Addreia Nov. 7, "We .are headed toward the most acute ahortaae• ofeneru alnce World War D."

Thirty yean have palled alnce World War D. Like any other colleae ln the 1940'•• Mary Hardln·Baylor Colleae had to conaenie ita fuel. Three decade• later, MH·BC wUI aaaln have to adapt precautionary mea· 1ure1 on fuel.

Slttlna In hla ofllce, Dr. WUIIam Anderaon, vice· prealdent of MH·BC, wu uked how the fuel ahortqe wUI aft'ect . the colleae. Hl1 reply wa1; .. "The fuel ahort•ae will not have that pat of an effect on. the colleae ltaelf. But we will have to take 1tep1 conaervlna fuel. The •hortaae will have 10me etlect on the recruit· lna proaram. The recrulten will have to cut down on the mlleaae and vl1lt1."

The recruiter•, BUI Blllot and Bob Connally, travel to all point• In Te111. They recruit between 3500 and 4000 mile• a month.

"If the auollne 1upply I• rationed, the recrultlna propam will oertalnly .be llmlted. Por example, If the aovemment ratlon•l5aallon• per driver per day, Mr. Connall)' and I will onl)' be able to aet to Aultln and back, MH·BC may mue arranaement• to reoelve a

MH-B Cuts Back ., ... ,. ..... Students at Mary Harclln·Baylor have been urpcl

by Dr, Bobby Parker, prllldtnt, to takt the lnltlat.lve In con11rvlnl tnerl)'.

Parker eaid ht had found no other Mhool when "•'udtnt.l have taken the lnl'la'lvt." · ·.

One of 'he mta~un• mentioned by Dr. Parker wu · havln1 dorm •'udent• and fuult.y membln turn off unneettllrJ ·lllhtlna. ·To bull up thll CIOMII'Yatlon plan, Dr, Parker eakhll deeoratlvtllptlnt on •mpu• will be 'urntd off, leavlnl onl)'· .Jtnt.lnl nttdtd for leaurlty pur~. ~· .,· · ·.; · · ·

He allo verified the flat 'hat lh• thrnal name near .JudpYiaylor'• pave wUI bt aut off •. He llld that It would '""' ·ln•n•llttnt to malntala ·an open ftam• while advooatlnl eonarvatlon.

Milt Htltn Wl110n, B'Udtnt Oovernmta' Allllla• tlon pretldtnt, offered ••m• more IUIIII,Ionl, lnaludlnl aarpool• for eommuter atudtnu. ,,_,nt

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a student publication ot IDary hardin-baylor

:friday, Nov. 30, 19T3

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g ateaily aupply of 1a10llae. I tried to travel SO m.p.h. once for an appointment and I wu nearly late. The dlatance• Mr. Connally aad I have to travel are often too tar ancllt wUI take too lona If the SO m.p.h.

· apeed limit wu enforced," commented Mr. Elliot. Althouah Mr. Elliot. and Mr. Connally may ·not be

able to recruit a• much peraonally, the colleae will alway• recruit. Our recrultlna wUI probably ~ by mall and telephone. · ..

Like the recrulten, commutlna 1tudont1 may al10 be affected by the fuel lhortaae. . . .. MH·B commutlna atudent• may have a hard time purcha•lna auollne from aervlce 1tatlon1. Price• may be aolna up when fuel 11 In peater demand.

Accorcllna to the .Mobile Dlltrlbutlna otftce In Temple, uou prlce1 will climb If then 11 an lncreaae on forelan crude oil or lf fuel· 1upplle• are further cut from the Arab natlona."

Pre~ently, MH·B purchue• natural au from the Lone Star Gu Compaoy. J, w. Wllllam1, maintenance director at MH·B, uld h~ ha• had no trouble obtalnloa aa•. However, If prolonpd bad weather came, cia••• will be cloHd and the heated dorm parlon will be uled •• cluaroom1.

Government Aaaocla,lon leadera will 1pon10r a booth at reld•tratlon, takln1 phone numbera, addrtiHI, and Hheclule• of atudenta, 'hen matahln1 them for aarpool purpo~~a. Mlat Wlllon Aid that thla •hould 1lmpllf1 the prooeu of ftndlnl 1ultablt rldtn.

Ot.ber IUir.ltl&nt oUtred wen that 1tudenta voluntarily 1 11ln drlvlnl at Prttldent Nhcon'• NGOMIMndtd lpttd or 10 m,p,h,, that dorm ltudentl eoordlna'e tripe to ~wn and home on WHkend• and hollday1, tha' 1tudenta lq . t.own eontldtr wallclltl or blkln1 to ~ehool, and tt11t all etudtnt.l aanfull1 rteontldtr .lont trlpt over WMI&tndl. . . ·

~w·ror the.'lia"n• •1111. Dr. Puller ••• .Ut Dr. Nlahollon, DlrteW or AdnalniiVatlve hrvlet" II at.rlvln1 for a :II· dqnt ttmperatun In aU aampu• ·

bur:~r:·~ ... bit ahQiy, one ean IIWIJI llrlltl a •weattr, Dr, Parker Ald. In rtplr to tholt ""' eomplaln abou' 'he ""'''"'UN' he lllld, "I Ju•t wllh that I aould pt. my MUll UP ... II dtiNIII"

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Pack 'Em In The BELLS offers these suggestions

for those interested in carpools: Be •ure each driver has adequate insurance - preferably liability cover­age up to $100,000 for individual passengers and $800,000 for the group. The cost of such coverage would raise premium costs $20 or so on the average, but it would be well worth it. .. Cheek with your IDauraace -.eat if you are going to be paying for rides. Some policies do not cover paying riders. Flacl out about the other drivers in the group if you are not sure of their· driving abilities. Make aure each driver check• periodical· ly for the safety and efficiency of brakes, steering equipment, and other factors that might influence the safe operating of his car. A loaded car puts more wear on tirel, shock abaorbera, and brakea, 10 a cheek by a garage every two or three months might be in order. Have each driver run a couple of teat runl, then allow extra time when the weather ia bad. lnalat that every paaaenger wear aeatbelta. ~· to pick paaaenpra up at home or at aealsnated apota out of the main now of traffic. .

By followtns theae few, common-aen•e preeautlona, a car-~1 can become a ufe economical way of pttlns to achool every day.

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Lost In The Stacks ByJoyR.t

Who's that. tall slender figure diligently at work at the card catalogue? Stewart Smith, of coune. He's at it again.

"I just like libraries," said Smith, assistant professor of history at Mary Hardin-Baylor College. "I enjoy poking around and pulling out books and looking at them."

He proves it by the amount of time he spends in the college library.

"My parents encouraged reading and I always used the public library," Smith said. He believes that a person who goes on to graduate school, especially in the area of history, should be able to effectively use the library. "A historian without a library would be like a carpenter without hands,'' he said. ·

Smith also likes to go to the old book sales sponsored by the library. Many times he is able to buy a valuable book for as little as fifty cents.

He uses the library for historical research and also for developing lists of available books for .the classes he teaches. Several new courses have been introduced into MH-B's history and political science program and Smith runs book checks on the course he teaches.

Smith came to MH-8 from No11h Texas State Univer­sity where he received his bachelors, masters, and doctors degrees. He taught two years at Weatherford Junior between the time he received his

Kaleidoscope Tile ........... .., real•tratlon ~ehodule for n·

turnlna 1tudont1 wlll be Dec. 12, In TownHnd Library. Student• mu1t havo a atudent tlmo achodulo •lanod by tholr advisor. Student• not In compllanco wlth thla requoat wlll not be permitted to realator until all now atudonta have completed their realatratlon Jan. 14, 1974. Rell•tratlon tlmoa will bo:

A-G ·9 1.m. H-M 9·10 a.m. N-R 10·11 a.m. s-z ll·l2 a.m.

M•"" ........ Into Alpha Chi In October 1hould pick up their mombenhlp certificate• at Dr. Puaull'• omco anytlme between 8 and 12 In the momlna or 2:30 to 3 p.m. on Tueaday and Thur~day aftemoon1.

.,..,..._........., Whl) are momben of TSBA will be honored frOm '1·9 p~m.;·;Oec. 3, at the home of Mra. Edna Brldae••: Thl-~!1!1~~:~ ~ ~· Moral Drive ln Tempi. . . .. . .. ... .. . ...

·· '1'111 N4iiMJ ·:&Jjj 1·01: Coun~ll for B•O.pttonai Chlldren I• aponaorlna i. Chf11tmu · Bpaar bltw••n 9:30 and 6 p.m., Saturday, Dec. 1, In the Towne and Country Shopplna Mallin Temple. The MH·B Student lfOUP of CBC haa' contributed many of the tift Item•• Thll will be a aood time to do Chrlatmaa Shopplna at reasonable prlco1.

masters. degree and the time he started work on his doctorate.

Smith came to MH-8 because he was interested in teaching in a small liberal arts college and w~ acquainted with Dr. James Goode, chairman of the college's history department. .

"I like it here," the well-dressed. Smith said. -"The atmosphere is qu~et and· pleasant and the people are friendly."

Coining frOm the background of a large university, Smith said he thought Mary Hardin-Baylor students were more conservative as a whole than other student bodies.

Smith believes ~he ideal personal relationship between student and instructor· is possible at MH-8 because of the low student-teacher ratio. He said that many junior colleges claim to provide .this relationship but in reality do not.

Smith has· other interests besides libraries, too. He and his wife, Nancy, have also developed an interest in .auctions and antiques since moving into the area. ..1 think a goOd historian ·has a tinge of antiquarianism in him," Smith said ... I enjoy finding old furniture and refinishing it." .

Smith said he has no definite future plans and just lives "from day to day!' Meanwhile, his worlt in the library Roes on, and if you enter the library and see a tall figure intently scribbling notes from the card cata­logue, there's a good ·chance it's Stewart Smith.

A ...aval aponaored by tho MH·B Bruin Brlpdo and BaHball Club will be from 5 to U p.m. Doc. I at tho MH·B buoball ftold. Adml1alon will be 25 cont1. At 9:30p.m. thoro will be drawlnaa fOJ' Hveral door prlle• atvon by area merchant•. A nltaurant will Ht'VO Bar·B·Ouo dlnnon for 11.25 per plato. In an oft'ol't to oam money for now bueball uniform• and oqulatmont, tho camlval wlll have boothl bolted · by 35 different club• from tho MH·B campu1 and the 111rroundlna Boll County area. The Youna Democrat• will alao have 1 voter• ·real•tratlon booth Htup.

Tile MR·B ....... Art Show will be Dec, S-6 and 10·11 In the Art Studio, third floOr of Prt111r. Tho atudlo will be open 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Mond~J and Wedneaday, and 1 to 4 p.m. on Tuelday and Thunclay. The Baylorlan Art Show will be ln conjunction with thla ahow. ·•

• •••••••• may •tart r.urcha~lna thtlr -1913·74 yearbook now ln The Ill •' of Bluebonnet omoe, and will alao be on nit at PNnalltratlon, Dec. lZ, The yearbook fee 11 II '.til the end of tht Mmtater. The Bluebonnet omce will be open betwetn the houn of la30 and 9:30a.m. Monday throuah Prlday.

2 Respo~se

.By&afSpelaldll Is College Park owned or managed by Mary Hardin­

Baylor College? - D.S. College Parlt, the mobile home park located behind

the MH-8 campus, is privately owned by Mr. Richard Dale, a member of the MH-8 Board of Trustees. Mr. Troy Hood, comptroller, said that College· Parlt is approved by MH-B. for off-campus housing. He also said that the land occupied by the parlt was originally owned by Mary Hardin-Baylor, but the college has no connection whatsoever with College Parlt.

Built in August and September 1973, College Park overlooks a beautiful farm setting, including two tall briclt silos. Mrs. Francis Folsom, manager of the park, said that the large duplex mobile homes at the park are for rent. Mrs. Folsom also said that lots are available for privately owned trailers at SS5 monthly, plus a property deposit of SSO. She said that all utilities, except electricity, are included in the lot rent .. Mrs. Folsom said that the parlt is still being developed, but will accommodate many mobile homes now. College Park provides a convenient and peaceful place to-park your trailer for· a few semesters.

••• All reasonable questions pertaining to MH-B

(campus life, programs, buildings, etc.) will be answered. Give your questions to Mr, Ron Hurt (office and publishing room,_ Ely-Pepper Hall) or any BELLS staff member. · · · ·

NeW fiche . By CWy Odla .

Students at Mary Harclin·Baylor College may not be familiar with a new .. fiche" in school. This "fiche" did not go through slime line nor did it have to wear a

·beanie. Actually, the "fiche" was purchased last semester and is located· in . the -library.

The microfische reader allows students at MH·B to find information • through . rare . books, pamphlets. and magazines which are .no .longer In use. ·

The sources o1 information pertains· to early American, CivilizAtion. I~ covers a period of 1492 to .1914; ·The Information relating to America, is gathered frOm inajor Unted States libfarlcs and is compUed into

. the "Mic:rO. Book Library of American Civilization". · · The micro book consists of four volumes.;;.. author, subject, bibliography, 'and title. Nearly 19,000 volumes of books, magazines and pamphlets are av!lUable. They are then printed on a 4x6 card. one thousand pages arc found on a single card. With the help of the mlcrofische it can be blown up to a regular size page.

The cards are available to students with a librarian's assistanee. .

Many libraries are depending on the microfische. MH·B owns four, one largo and throe portables. The portables may be checked out ovomlght.

The mlcroflsche machines are not difficult to use with printed Instructions on it. The library at MH-B haa also ordered tho "Library of Congreaa" cataloaue cards. Those card a ahould arrive at the bealnnlna of next year,

A.,.....,....... on Black Poetr)' wUI be preHnted Doc. 4, by Sylvia Duckon1, Aadrea Hardlna, and A. J, Moland at the Poetry Society meettna.

The mottlna II opened to MH·B atudont• and I• achoduled for 4 p.m. In the faculty lounao. ••

'l1le Plaal m.-s.w• haa been releaHCI by Dr. William Anereon. Student'• are to Clontact the Vlco-Pre•ldent of Academic Affaln If the1'_ mil• an exam due to lllnea• and 1ecure an excuu. There will be 1 t10 fee for all makeup exam• and for thoae taken early. The exam 1chedule II 11 follow11 Clu• l!lu Tlae DUe

8:00 MWF cla1111- 8:80a.m. ·11180 a.m. 11/18/18 9100 MWF ell•••- 8:80 a.m. ·11:80 a.m. 111/18/18 10100 MWF claiHI- 8180 a.m. ·11180 a.m. 111/11/18 11100 MWF claiHI- 8:80a.m. ·1'1180 a.m. 111/17/18 111:00 MWF cla•n•- 8180 a.m. ·l1180 a.m. . 111/18/18 8100 TTH ala••• ~ 1180 p.m. • •180 p.m. 11/18/11J taao TTH claiHa -1180 p.m. • •180 p.m. 111/l•trtJ 1100 TTH ala••• -1180 p.m.· •180 p.m. 11111111 11180 TTH olaue• -1180 p.m. • •180 p.m. 111/17/11 1:00 MWF clatHI- 8100 p,m, • t ,,m, 11/11/18 11100 MWF clatHI- 8100 p.m. • t100 p;m, 11/1./18

Nl1ht olua• will have ftnal examination• at their repl•u•ly achlduled mlftlnl time, betlnnlnl the wetk of December~. lt78, · ,

A Picture Is • •• A newapaper photopapher mlaht be called upon to

ciapture a moment of beauty, an unuaual newa ahot or a mood piece. Jn the mldat of hi• dut111, the photop1pher Ia alto aaked to photopaph th1 day'• newa which mlaht happen In the early mornlna or late at ·nlaht •. So to aompenAte for thOH lona houn Impelled on photopapher Ricky Boale1, The Bella II · runnln1 three picture• that ahow another aide of Rlaky'• talenta. A• the A)'IRJIOII, a plctun Ia worth a thouund worda.

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TROGOLA,GOLD

Outside World IJ.IIMMixH

• c1nema TDIPU:

"Nlshtwat.eh" · Arcadia. "Savo The Children" • Te::aa.

KILLEEN "Harrad Experiment • Cinema I. "Scalaway" lr "Willy Wonka lr The Choeolate

Factory" · Cinema 11. "Jeremiah Johnton" i "Man In the Wllderneaa" •

Cinoma Piau J. "Romeo II Juliet." · Cinema Piau Jl,

AUSTIN "The Sorrow and The Pity" • Rlvertlde Twin

Cinema. "The New Land" • Rlver•lde Twin Cinema. "ElxeC!ut.lve Aot.lon" • Fox Twin.

COPPIL\8 COVE "J,ady Kun1 Fu" • Cinema Thea~re.

theatre TIMPLI

"Pia11 Suitt", Ttmplt Clvlo Theatre, Nov, 10 Dto. 1, e, '1, 1r 8,1111 p.m., Cultural Aot.lvltlea Otater, Tlekttl sa. OAO dlaoount. atudenta •uo. tna.•'tll or .,., .. ., .. ,,

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Tennis T earn VolleyS By MleiiMIWIIIIa.l

For moat students the Thanualvina Holidays mean a time of relaxation, viaittna relatives and frlenda, and preparlna for thoae dreaded finals that assail students shortly after their return.

In the caae of the MH·B tennis team this was not the caae u they participated in toumamentl around the state.

Robert Troaola, a sophomore from South Africa, wu in Fort Worth playinain the Fort Worth Thantaaivtna Day Toumament. In the Men• Sinalea Dlvi1ion Tropia defeated David Kina of Trinity with a ftnaiiCOre of 7-6, 7-6. -

Nov. 19, Tropia and Craia Gold, also from South

WACO · ''The Kln1 and 1", Baylor University'• 8rd Annual

Mu•ical Production, Nov. 80 lr Dee. 1, 81l& p.m., Waeo Hall on the Baylor campua, all 1eata reaerved, t8 and 14, 817/'IU·8211.

art ANDICE

&th Arta 6 Craft• Show, Dea. 1·11, Andiot Sohool Bulldin1.

TlliiPLil · llxhlbltlon 1r Sale of ();ltlnal Graphlo Art, Temple Junior Oollep S~udant Union, J?••· ath, 11100 a.m. to &100 p.m. . .

ballet · 4UITIN

"The Nutaraektr"i Au1tln Clvlo Ballet, Muniolpal Auditorium, Dtt, ' 8, Rtatrvtd tloktta ona,, ta.IO

. and ••• 110, available at box orne.. r

DALLAl "Tht Nl1ht Befort Chri1tmaa", Tht Dallal

Metropolitan Ballet, Mararlln Audlwrlum, Dta. ll&h, 11100 p.m., Tlektta U itudtnta and A adultlavallallll at lt.ate ralr Boll om. at Tltaht'e,. P.O. Boa-,. Dallal, '1111111. •

Africa, participated in the third Laredo International Tennll Toumament. Defeattna Gold 7-5, 6-1, Tropia won the men'• open •lnalea.

Gold and Melvin Collazo traveled to Corpu1 Chrllti durlna the holiday• to participate In the Thank•atvlna Day Toumament. In the men'• 1inate1 Gold lost to James Tout who waa 1eated fourth whUe Collazo loat to Mario Valle who wa1 aeated aeventh In the fourth round.

In double'• competition Collazo and Gold· had a bye the flrat round and went on to beat Waa and Henderson in the aecond round. In the third round they beat Cap and Gordon but lolt the fourth round to Howard Butt of Trinity and Perry of Mi1sourl City.

• revteW At laat. Good food, IOOd entertainment, and both In

Cen~ral T••••· The Fort Hood CommunitJ Theatre (FHCT) expanded lt.l HOPI of prtall•tlnl theatrical entertainment for elvUlana and mllltaey by the pramelre of a dinner theatre.

The Hideaway Sup~r Club at Fort Hood waa tht aett1n1 for Nell Simon 1 "Lilt of tht Rtd Hot Loven", a verJ enJoyable oomedy, well performed, and aooom~nltd br pod food.

The dinner thtatn oonotpt. waa tried bJ the 'HOT to aee If the reapon11 woulcl.bt favorable. Tht head of the Muala 6 Theatre Branoh of Bpealal Btrvlaea, Jam11 T. Hamilton, uld that all tlakttl for tht thrtt perlormantta were aold out In advan11 and mtiiJ .,eoplt wert turned down. llvldtntlr the demand for thla \fpt of entertainment 11 p~alent In thll ana. Mr. HlmiiMn uld that the rHOT hoped M btlln nrular performanoea. Tht performan• would bt mon=hl molt lll&tlJ '*'u• of tht tlmt altment In pre 1 for a prodllftlon. Mn. rran O'MIIItJ II the Nl nt dlrtator It tht rHOT. Bht and the taltntld voluntttra ·work YtrJ hard to brln1 tht btat of llfoldWaJ ahowi. to "" ar11,

ror fUrt.htr llfoi'MI"OI ..... "'l $he future produotlona, ' telephone tii·IHI. lao· anJont lnttrtl&td In perforiniDI or ~~~~~tlg In anr .. ,_ of pradultloti ·lhHid er.taft the J'HOT, · · · ·

Anderson

Art by Sherle llaaptoa

By Doris Prater Will the real Bill Elliott please stand up? II He's know as Bill, seldom Mr. Elliott. He's a licensed E ··ot Bn·ngs 'Em In

minister. He was voted the Outstanding Young Man of Belton in 1969. He was cited as "Friend" by the 4-H. He averages 2,000 miles a month In recruiting prospective students.

And the list goes on. Turning down small scholarships from other

schools, Mr. Elliott came to MH·B in 1962 because of the opportunity to debate. By 1963 he worked full time for KTON and was full time student and debater. In 1967 he became Assistant to the General Manager at KTON. He h'l'adunted from MH-B In 1971 and gave up nine years of radio work in 1972 to take his present position as Director of Admission and Financial Aid.

Photography and fishing nrc his pastime activities. Besides their two children, he and his wife, Carroll nl11n havo nn Interest in the ocean. His newest hobby is stamp collecting because of the different stamps that como through the administration office. "You learn 11 lot about the society 11nd history of dlfferenct cnuntrlus."

Mr. Elllott'11 special emphasis Is In working with youth. He has received four awards for Youth Coverugu Through the Medium of Radio and was nntecl for Distinguished Service to Youth In 1966. He unci hl11 wlfo operated tho Belton Toen Canteen flvo yu11r11 "for" tho Belton youth. He has worked with the !loy S!!!mts nnd with 11 hiKh school training group at thtl T•'ir11t Bnptist Church In Delton. RogardinK youth hu fooiK thnt IlK n iicensecl mlniKtor It Is better to work with out 11 litlu.

In his clullos "" flnanclnl director he is responsible for ret•ruiUng nncl flnancl11l aid to students.

Othur t.hnn t•at.chlng up on his work his chief gonlla tn lncruntm tho unrollment at MH·B. "I'll do everything In my power In help those with n financial need." He helluvus no one should bo denied a collogo education hucmuNu of flnancua. "I'll hrenk my back to holp a Hturlont."

Howuvor, he bullovoa thnt not ovoryono should go to t•olh,l(u. "M11ny Jlooplo nrc more aultod ror technical tr11ining. ThiK Ia one ren11on I never try to hard soli MII·B"

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a student publication of mary hardin-baylor

friday, dec. '7, 19T3

ByJoyRost Mary Hardin-Baylor College has an academic

program she can be proud of. And a large portion of her success is a result of the efforts of the Vice-President for Academic Affairs, Dr. William J. Anderson.

Anderson is the coordinator of the academic-college life division at MH-B. He is responsible for supervising the areas of academic programs, the library, student housing, the registrar, adult education, continuing education, facilities, professional personnel, student organizations, admissions and financial aid, inter­institutional programs, and institutional planning.

If that seems like a big job-it is. But Anderson says he doesn't tell people what to do; he simple coordinates efforts in these main areas of college life. "And the people I work with are very cooperative," he added.

Another aspect of Anderson's job is keeping President Bobby E. Parker informed and up to date on anything that might affect educational institutions. Both Anderson and Parker read several magazines every week and try to attend at least one seminar every year to increase their knowledge and understanding in running a first-rate college.

Anderson also counsels many students who come to his office with personal or academic problems. "I don't have as much personal contact with the students as I'd like. I'd like to know them better," he said. "My office is always open to them and I'll never turn one of them down."

His jovial and understanding personality invite many students to confide in him. "I think this job requires patience and listening," Anderson said. "The main thing is being fair and honest and keeping a confidence."

Anderson obtained his bachelors and masters degrees from North Texas State University and his doctorate from Baylor University. He and his wife, Mary Lou, have one son who is finishing law school at the University of Houston.

"And I have a grandson who is four and a half months old," Anderson says with pride. "But I haven't decided yet whether he'll be another Babe Ruth or a Johnny Unitas. I know I'll sure try to spoil him."

Anderson's two favorites activities outside of his job are golf and church. He is a member of the First Baptist Church, Belton. About his golfing ability Anderson says, "I like to play but I'm not that good. I just like to play maybe twice a week to relax."

The President's House By Norman Northen

Everyone at Mary Hardin-Baylor knows what the big white house on the hill is, but few know its history. Mrs. Marietta Parker. present first lady, deserves much credit for her efforts in maintaining the traditions and history of the lovely old home, and its furnishings.

The biggest shock to many people is the fact that the Parkers do not live in the original President's Home. The original home faced south toward 9th St. The only known piece of the house kept is the door, which was the front door to the laundry before Dr. Parker was inaugurated. Mrs. Parker had the door, which has an inset of frosted glass, taken down and stored.

The present home was built in 1923, after the first was destroyed by fire. At the time of the fire, extensive remodeling of the interior was being completed, and a new coat of paint was to be added. Workmen were using a blowtorch to remove the old coat, and accidently set the house afire. Built on the same

Honors Anyone By Michael Williams

In order to graduate with honors at MH-B a student must be in the Honors Program. This may come as a surprise to many students who are not aware of just what this program is.

''Basically the program is intended as a method of allowing students to do a type of work of a nature that is not possible in the classroom situation," Mr. Stewart Smith, sponsor said.

Other sponsors for the program, which is intended for the better academic student, are Dr. William Hutmacher and Dr. James Heath.

To enter the program a student must be of junior standing and have a 3.0 grade point average. The student must also graduate with a 3.5 grade point

Kaleidoscope Students may start purchasing their 1973-74

yearbook now in The Bells' of Bluebonnet office, and will also be on sale at Preregistration, Dec. 12. The yearbook fee is $8 'til the end of the semester. The Bluebonnet office will be open between the hours of 8'30 and 9,30 a.m. M*rou•h Friday.

The 1prlna 1emeater registration schedule for returning students will be De. 12,1n Townsend Library. Students must have a student time schedule signed by their advisor. Students not in compliance with this request will not be permitted to register until all new students have completed their registration Jan. 14, 1974. Registration times will be:

A-G 8-9 a.m. H-M 9-10 a.m. N-R 10·11 a.m. s-z 11-12 a.m.

The Final Exam Schedule has been released by Dr. William Anderson. Students are to contact the Vice-President of Academic Affairs If they miss an exam due to Illness and secure and excuse. There will be a 510 fee for all makeup exams and for those taken early. The exam schedule Is as follows: Cia•• Exam Tlmo Date 8:oo MWF classes-8:30a.m. • II :30 a.m. 12/13173 9:00 MWF classes-8:30a.m. - 11:30 a.m. 12114173 10:00 MWF classes-8:30a.m. ·11:30 a.m. 12115173 11:00 MWFclasses- 8:30a.m.· 11:30a.m. 12117173 12:00MWFclasses-8:30a.m. -11:30a.m. 12118173 H:OO TTH cla&&e&-1 :30 p.m.· 4:30p.m. 12113173 9:30TTHclllllliea-1:30p.m. ·4:30p.m.. 12/14173 1:00 TTH clas11ea- I :30 p.m.· 4:30p.m. 12115173 2:30TTH claues -1:30 p.m.· 4:30p.m. 12/17173 I :00 MWP claues- 6:00p.m.· 9 p.m. 12/13173 2:00 MWP clauea- 6:00p.m.· 9:00p.m. 12/14173

Night claues will have nnal examination• at their regularly scheduled meetlnallme, bealnnlna tho week of December 3, 1973.

foundation to save money, the remains of two old houses were used to rebuild the President's Home. Except for a few changes, the first floor remains as constructed in 1923.

Entering the large, white two story home, one first notices the harp. Bought for the college music department by President and Mrs. Gordon Singleton, it represented their dreams of starting a harp program for the college. Costing $500 in 1941, it was in use as long as a harp professor was available. Later, it was packed away in Heard Hall and forgotten. In 1967, during the renovation of Wells Science Hall, President Holloway discovered the harp among other college artifacts.

Also in the foyer are the oak loveseat and chairs which were originally in the parlor of Ely-Pepper, in the days it served as a dormitory.

At a recent reception, an alumni told Mrs. Parker that the loveseat was the "courtin" place" for herself

average or better. This is based on the assumption that most students tend to make better grades as Juniors and Seniors than as Freshmen and Sophomores.

To complete the program the student must take the Honors Seminar, a program of guided readings on a common theme. The class meets once every two weeks­During the period of time between meetings members of the class will have read a book that deals with some aspect of the topic under discussion that semester.

The topics are chosen by the Honors Committee. The committee does take the opinions of the students under consideration but makes the final decision. Past topics have been an attempt to define, delineate, or discuss the American Character and a study of minorities. This course must be taken a minimum of two times but may be repeated for credit.

Mrs. Judy Lusk and Mrs. Elizabeth Gibson attended the 67th Annual Vocational Convention in Atlanta, Georgia, Nov. 30-Dec. 5. The theme of the Home Economics Section was "The Role of Home Economics in the Total Educational System."

Dr. Fuasell attended the annual convention of the American Studies Association of Texas Dec. 1-2, at Angelo State College in San Angelo.

The date of the Christmas Dinner has been reset for 6:30p.m. Dec. 11. The wreath hanging will begin at 6:00p.m. Tickets for the occasion are on sale for 51 in the Business Department.

Tho Art Department Is offering a materials course during the spring semester. Mrs. Burks will be the course Instructor. Macrame and weaving will be some of the major areas of focus for the course.

The Bualneaa Department will be offering a new Internship program In the Secretary Training course. Dr. Huston will be the Instructor the sptlng semester.

The Muale Dopartmon Is emphasizing the MH·B Band Program for the spring semester. Mr. James Miller will be the Instructor this spring,

All student charges must be paid before the student can pre·realster for the spring semester Dec. 12, 1973. Students that do not register In December will pay a SIO late registration fee In January.

Membon Inducted Into Alpha Chi In October should pick up their membership certificate• at Dr. Fusaell's office anytime between 8 and 12 In the mornlna or 2:30 to 3 p.m. on Tuesday and Thursday afternoons.

The MH·D Student Art Show will be Dec. S-6 and 10·11 In the Art Studio, third floor of Pre11or. The studio will be open 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Monday and Wedneaday, and I to 4 p.m. on Tue1day and Thuraday. The Baylorlan Art Show will be In conjunction with thla •how.

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and many others. The girl sat on one end, the boy on the other, and always a proctor in the middle.

In the living room hangs the painting of Miss Irene McNelly by H. A. McArdle, art professor at the college during the 1870's. Recently Mrs. Parker learned the truth about the bullet hole in the painting. Alleged to be a Civil War bullet hole, the truth is a bit more pragmatic, having been done by Miss McNelly's mentally disturbed brother, Rebel.

A large, bevelled mirror hangs above the fireplace. Mrs. Parker looked "seemingly everyplace" for a mirror large enough. She finally discovered one in the old Day Student's Lounge in Ely-Pepper where it was being used for a bulletin board.

Of interest to the traditionalist is the Singleton bathroom. Mrs. Singleton greatly admired the school color of purple, and this bathroom is the remaining room in the house where her decorations haven't been changed.

In addition to taking the Honors Seminar, the student must also designate three courses in his major field of study as honors courses and write a senior honors paper on some aspect of his studies.

One of the key things about the program, according to Mr. Smith, is that it is conducted very informally.

The program allows the student to discuss topics from various disciplines.

At the present time ten students are involved in the Honors Program with nine of these in the Honors Seminar. Mr. Smith believes that many more students

would find the program interesting. Anyone interested in the Honors program is urged to contact Mr. Smith at his office in Hardy Hall.

Fuel Ideas The BELLS has compiled this list of conservation ideas:

Use light bulbs of smaller wattage. Move desks near a window Move beds away from windows so that

nightime chill won't be so bad. Turn off televisions when not is use. In

the dorms, students should consider watching the dorm tv rather than running 10 individual sets.

Turn the temperature of refrigerators up slightly, especially in cold weather.

Turn dishwashers off after the rinse cycle and dry by hand. Dishwashers with automatic drying cycles consume the most energy in this cycle. Also, don't run dishwashers or washing machines without a full load.

Hang clothes out to dry, using a clothes dryer, possible.

instead of whenever

Don't use an electric oven if you have a small 'appliance that will do the job. Electric broilers, toasters and skillets are more efficient since they heat a smaller area and are designed to do a specific job.

To relieve the paper shortage, students can share magazine subscrip­tions and swap books. Townsend Library has a paperback book exchange that could be used.

Also, people using stencils should fill the stencil, repeating the matter to be preinted, and then cut apart the paper, rather than using a whole sheet for two paragraphs.

Carnival

By Janet Scott Amid a throng of students, faculty and friends, the

MH·B Bruin Carnival was a successful event last Saturday evening. The event was a fund raiser for the baseball team. Many other organizations and societies sponsored booths from kissing booths to cake walks.

The highpoint of the evening was the awarding of doorprizes. The winners were Teddy Nicholson, paint: Sylvia Duckens, candle arrangement: Gloria Lucero, radio: Linda Simmons, mixer; Ronny Emery, watch: and Betty Wilson, racing set.

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Artists By Andrea Harding

The world of an art student is one of expression. The MH-B are department presented its view of

''expression" Wednesday and Thursday and will continue next Monday and Tuesday from 8 a.m.-5 p.m. in the art room on the third floor of Presser.

the are show this year has contributions from five different are classes. They include the design class of jewelry to the "advanced mudpie" ceramics.

MH-B art students may sell their creations. The other classes contributing are drawing, sculpture, painting and independent study.

Dr. Ted Austin and Mrs. Maurine Burks, assistant professors of art are advisors for the art show.

"An art show is a way to show off a student's work. It should let the people see what interesting things happen in the art department. We think putting on the show is a way of giving the students the experience of an art show," said Dr. Austin.

Mrs. Burks said, "It doesn't matter the worth of an

Response By Hal Spei«hts

Why isn't the TV room in Mabee Student Center open'!-N.X.

Dr. Samuel Nicholson, director of administrative services, said that because of the steel supports in the walls of Mabee, the reception is very poor. He said that furniture is being stored in the TV room, but poor reception is the reason it isn't open. Dr. Nicholson also said that other problems take priority, but that alternate means of reception are being discussed with Dr. Parker.

Later Dr. Nicholson said that cable TV was decided on. Ht• said that Cablevision of Belton has been t•ontractt!d for cable installation in the TV room in Mabee, om• outlet in each dormitory and three outlets in tbt• Audio-Visual room in Ely-Pepper Hall. "The monthly cable fct• for the three outlets in the Auclio-Visual room will he donated by Cablevision for t•durntinnal JlUrJloSt!s," he added. Dr. Nicholson also said thnt everything is reudy for the cable installation, wbit•h wns installed on Dec. 3.

Why Willi the direction of traffic on the center street on t•nmpus chnngt•d'!-J .E.

Weekend Dy Jane Mixon

• c1nema AUSTIN

"'l'hu Way Wo Wore" · Amorlr.11na "l~xocutlvo Action" · Fox 2 "That Darn Cut" · Fox 1 "Tho Nt•w l.and" · Rlvorsido Twin Cinema "Tho Sorrow and Tho Pity" · Riverside Twin

Cinomn II KILLEEN

"Midnight Cowboy" & "Whoro'a Poppa'l" · Clnomn Pl11v.a II

"R11ntoo" · Clnomn Pla~m I "Tho Clones" · Cinomn I "Your Throe Minutes Art• Up" · Clnom11 II

art painting, it's what a student puts into it - reaction that is received. I never judge one show against another. I think each show has its own merits. I think, that what surpresses students is when all the work's put together, they suddently realize how much work has been done."

What do art students think? Mary Zeman is a member of the drawing class. She

does not consider herself an artis. "I'm only an elementary education major," she said. "I think anyone can learn to draw if they really want to. It may not meet their expectations but they can learns!"

Fern Otrupcak is in the jewelry class. She thinks jewelry is more abstract than any other design class. It gives the student the challenge to be free and more open in expressing themselves, Miss Otrupcak said.

Kim Thoa Faxon is also a member of the drawing class. "I think it's beautiful to put what you see on paper," she said. · Ronnie Miller is in the sculpture class. Art to Miller

Troy Hood, comptroller, said that because of the congestion of traffic near Burt Dormitory after Chapel, the direction of traffic had to be changed. He also said that regular traffic posed no problems for the "old flow". "The present flow of traffic funnels the after Chapel rush quite smoothly," he added.

Is the rumor true that Gettys Dormitory is going to be turned into a men's dorm? - F.M.

Troy Hood, comptroller, said when Johnson Hall is filled, Gettys Dormitory will be one of the buildings under consideration for another men's dorm. Mr. Hood also said that 41 male students now live in Johnson and that 66 is the capacity. "We have a long way to go before a changeover can be considered," he added.

••• All reasonable questions pertaining to MH-B

lcamrus life, programs, buildings, otc.) will be answered. Give your questions to Mr. Ron Hurt. (office nnd publishing room, Ely-Pepper Hall) or any BELLS stnrr mombor.

theatre AUSTIN

"How The Other Half Loves", Starring Hans Conrlod, Country Dinner Playhouse, Reservations . fi 12/838-11921.

TEMPI.E "Plaza Suite", Doc. 7 & 8, 8:15 p.m., Tomplo Civic

Thontro, 778-4761, Tickets $3, $2.70 CAC Discount, and $1.50 students.

"Woody Gutherie · Child of Dust", Tomplo Junior College, Doc. 14, 15, and16, 8:00p.m., Jackaon·Gnotor Hawkstngo Theatre, Reaorvatlon• 773·9961, Tickets $2.50 gonur11l public, $t.lm other students, and TJC Nt.udonta free.

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is a hobby. "It's fascinating to sit and create things with your hands! It's also a great way to get off steam and tensions of the day!"

Dicque Lucenay is a member of the ceramics class. "It's fun to see what your fingers can do and glazing pots are fun I"

Sherie Hampton, a freshman art minor, is a perfectionist. She said, "I like to draw with pencil better than oils or watercolor. You get better detail out of a pencil point than a pen or paint brush."

The variety of answers given by the art students as their reasons for taking part in the MH-B art program, will be best exemplified at the show.

Visitors can make up their own minds about what expression is all about.

uckoo's Nest By Tom Moore

"One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest" by Ken Kesey is night marishingly alive and a very unforgetable book.

"One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest" is about men in a mental hospital. This is the type of mental hospital everyone sees upon mentioning the name "Mental Hospital".

Big ward boys slapping the patients in line with a look or a hand, tying patients in bed at night, patients under-going operations which leave them little more than vegetables and an iron fisted bead nurse. All the ingredients for a fast moving exciting book.

The main character is a fun-loving rebel, McMurphy, who swaggers into the ward of mental hospital, after convincing his prison warden he was crazy and takes over.

With McMurphy being the only person in a hospital of nuts, sees how they nrc taken advantage of and docs something about the situation.

The contest, with the head nurse, starts as sport, with McMurphy taking bets on the outcome. However it soon becomes more than sport. Rather a fight for the minds and hearts of tho men on the ward. The head nurse backed by authority and McMurphy by his own will.

You won't want to put the book down until you find out who wins the contest in the mental hospital.

dance AUSTIN

"Tho Nutcrnekor", Annual Chrlstmns Prosontntlon, Austin Civic Hnllet, Municipal Auditorium, Doc. 7 & 8, 8:00 p.m., $3.50 nnd $4.60.

• mUSIC

AUSTIN UT Jau Enaomble, Doc. 11, 8:00 p.m., Hogg

Auditorium, (471·1444), 8:00 p.m., Froo, Handel's "Mes&lllh", Doc, 14, Municipal Auditorium,

Advance tickets at tho Parka & Recreation Dept. and UT'a HogK Auditorium, $2·$5, 476·6692 or 471-1444.

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the SPECIAL Edition

Dec. 12, 1973

Four Day Week Approved By Dr. Parker Gettys To Be Closed Next Semester

By Cindy Ortiz Going one step further to

conserve energy at Mary Hardin­Baylor College, Dr. Bobby Park­er, president, announced to the President's Advisory Council in a meeting Dec. 6, that Gettys Dorm would be closed.

The 43 residents of Gettys Dorm will have to reside in Burt or Stribling Dorms, beginning next semester, Dr. Parker said.

In a Gettys Dorm meeting, Mrs. Nora Scaggs, assistant dean of women, informed the girls of the decision made earlier in the day.

Solutions concerning rent, the assignment of dorm mother, Mrs. Joyce Butler to another dorm and finding campus jobs for the office girls were also discussed.

Mrs. Scaggs said dorm rent for the former occupants of Gettys will be the same next semester no matter which dorm they live in.

It was decided to assign Mrs. Butler to Alexander next semes­ter and Gettys oftice girls will be assigned new jobs.

The announcement of closing of the dorm cume the same da.{ as the approval of the four-duy school week.

As early as April 16, 1973, Dr. William Anderson, vice-pres!-

dent, recommended the four-day school week, but it wasn't until the emergence of the energy crisis that it was approved.

Anderson did not foresee the energy crisis. Instead his recom­mendation was intended to re­serve a day for students and

.teachers. "The four-day school week has

the potential to more adequately utilize faculty time. Primarily the fifth day would provide the opportunity for faculty and other professional personnel to en­gage in seminars, enrichment activities. remedial work and special testing for the guidance center," said Anderson.

After presenting the original recommendation to Dr. Parker, Dr. Anderson visited Brigham Young University in Utah. Brig­ham Young used the trimester plan and Anderson was Impres­sed with it.

Dr. Porker hud reservations about the four·day school week proposal. However, he gave Dr. Anderson the "O.K." to study the recommendation. Dr. Parker replied Aprll17, 1973, and stated: "This is an excellent innovative idea. Why don't you place our spring schedule on this and see what It looks like and maybe we can experiment.

"I never really thought of having a four-day school week. I guess the main reason I was against the recommendation was the wasted time in academic studies. Two reasons why I changed my mind were that the quality of education would not be reduced and the energy crisis," said Dr. Parker.

When asked if MH-B will

actually conserve energy with the action taken, Dr. Parker replied that Mary Hardin-Baylor College had no choice but to conserve energy.

Though Gettys Dorm will be closed and students will have to adjust to the four-day school week, MH-B will have to conserve energy. Only time will tell if the conservation efforts will be enough.

Editorisl

Christmas Is lovel By Evelyn Smith

Students rushing, cramming. Shoppers fussing, jabbing. Lights twinkling, then dimming. Rush­ing, worrying.

How will I get home? What will happen if I flunk psyche? Wonder If Kattner will give me more than half for this book?

Wish Christmas was happy, like when I was a kid. How come they call Christmas the happiest time of the year?

Traditionally, Christmas has been a happy time. It has been a time of sharing, of giving, a celebration of the love God has

given man through Christ. Many have written that Christmas has become too commercial, that the spirit of Christmas is dead, that Christ has been removed from Christmas.

The crux of the matter is that Christmas can only be dead if one lets it die. If Christ is still alive in the hearts of Christians. why do so many of them complain about the hassle which surrolmds the holiday, and so few seem con­cerned about the reason for Christmas? Maybe the hest gift of all this yenr would be, not an expensive gift, but 11 simple smile, a gift of love.

SHORT WEEK MAY CHANGE LIFE STYLES Ry 1\i&ke William•

When MH·D switches to the four·day school week next semes­ter, the life styles of studuntK, faculty, Ntuff, und administration mny undergo drastic chnngcs. Chan11e IN alwayN accompanied by prnhlcmN thut must he 11olved If the chnnge IN to he IIUccessful and next semeliter'N switch is no exception.

One of the main prnhlums for faculty nnd HtmlentK will be a roorgnnl~ntion of lecture ciiUIIIOH from n flfty minute time period to n seventy or eighty minute time 11erlnd. AN Nome ciUIIIIIlll tund to lend thomNelvc• to thu 11hnrtur time 11erlod, the methodolo~&y of the1o clnuuli will have to chnnue If lntereat l11 not to lng.

The Tuesdny, ThurHday chnpel

time slot will still be In effect next liemcster so that no orsa!lizntlon meeting" will need to be affected. Ahi<l, If the number of students uttendlng chnpelncxt semester Is low enough, the pro11rams may be held In the Lillian Shelton theatre.

Hill Elliot, Flnanclnl Aid Dlrec· tor, lillid thut no work study studentH will be nffected by the chunge. Tho11e students on work study will he nhle to work n full duy on Mondays. It remains to be Kcenlfthe work duty students will he nffoctcd. ThoseHtudentli In the work Htudy prouraun will he nhle to work a full dny on Mondnyli. It romnlns to he suen If the work duty Htudents will bu affected.

Graduntlng 11enlnu may hnve some trnubleli In 11chedullng nil of

' thu claiNiieH needed for grndun·

tlon. Mrs. A. L. Nnrmnnd, registrar, could offer no advice on this ns those prnblcnu; will have to he worked out on an lndlvldunl basiN. Any deviation would huve In be upprnvod by Dr. Anderlion, vice-president nf ucudemlc at'­falrli.

One fnctor thnt should he stressed IN thnt Monday will not be a dend duy. Some organbn­tlons mny 1111e thiN dny tn prepnre their nctlvltieli. The llbrnry will be npon thnuyh the hnurtt will he different.

Dny fitUdentN whn nnd them· selvett with a lnrucnmount of time hotween elnueN mny flnd It mnre prontahle to utllllo the llbrnry 1111d 111 udont centur. It is nlsn hoped thnt they will becnme n

greater part of the cnllelle life. Dr. Bobhy Pnrker, president,

wus against the lcleu of a four·dny Nchnnl week when it was proposed enrller but chnnyed hili ~>pinion In view nf tho ener11y criNis. Dr. Purker believes thnt thh IN MH-B'N Christian respnnsc "" putrlntlc cltl;r.ens to the criHIN.

"The next ninety dny11 will be the mnHt crucial In the energy crh;IN nnd wo must sucriflce uc~ordlnQiy," Dr. Purker Hnld.

Dr. Pnrkor wont on to liRY tl111t he hud never fnund It gond to nttompt chnnge In the m lddlc but thnt thoro wn11 no chulco. Af1cr the Nemcliter It may be fuund thnt the fuur·dny 11chool week will not wnrk nt MH-O. If this IUIJlJlOllH it will ho dlllcnntlnued. Only time will toll.