The Howard Payne College Yellow Jacket (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 6, Ed. 1 Friday, October 25, 1968 Page: 2 of 4
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THE YELLOW JACKET, October 25, 1968
Page 2
NEWS BRIEFS «S
Dr. and Mrs. B. O. Herring
have returned from Mill Val-
ley, Calif., where Dr. Herring
spoke at Golden Gate Baptist
Theological Seminary. Dr. Her-
ring, a former president of
the Seminary, was invited to
give the Founder's Day address
on Wednesday, October 16.
* * #
The United States Army Of-
ficer Selection Team will be
on the Howard Payne College
campus on October 28 and 29. <
le team will be located in
ie Student Center.
AH senior men are invited
to get the facts on how they ■
can fulfill their military obli-
gation and also receive the
executive training and chal-
lenge of leadership offered to
commissioned officers in the
U. S. Army.
The team can administer
qualification tests to any sen-
ior who is interested in learn-
ing if he is qualified for the
Officer Candidate School Col-
lege Option Program. These
tests in no way obligate the
individual to enter the service.
* * *
'Alpha Lambda Delta, the
freshmen women's honor so-
ciety, will haVe its initiation
of new members Tuesday,
October 29 at 7:30 p.m. at Mrs.
Dorothy Jean Schroeder's
home at 1715 Vincent.
Brenda McGinnis and Syl-
bia Eansberger will be initiat-
ed at this meeting. Paulette
Manning, the president will
preside. All upperclassmen
who were in the organization
are invited to come.
* *
APO pledges will hold a car
wash Saturday, October 26
from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. be-
hind Jennings Hall. A dollar's
donation would be appreciat-
ed, and the cost will be only
75c with this clipping.
. * *
Deadline for applications for
positions on Top Notch, the
college literary magazine, is
today, Miss Tessica Martin,
publications sponsor, announc-
ed-. All applications should be
handed in at the publications
building by 5 p.m. r
* * * !■
Morning Watch has schedul-
ed Tony Dyer to speak Mon-
day, October 28. Eddie Daniels
will lead Wednesday, October
30, and Nancy Walker and
Linda Kidd will be in charge
of the Friday, Novemberl, ser-
vice. " ■ " '■■.viiutj, j.
* * *
Linda Haider will speak at
Vespers this Tuesday. Linda
will show slides and talk on
Summer Missions.
Thursday, Ed Markham will
be in charge of Vespers. The
program will feature singing
and guitar music.
PRv'W;*
Funeral Rites Held
For H. L. Cravens
Funeral services were held
Tuesday afternoon for H. L.
Cravens, educator, financier
and rancher, and father of Dr.
H. L. Cravens Jr., head \ of
HPC's Department of Politi-
cal Science. ?
A native of McCulloch Coun-
ty and member of a ,pioneer
Texas ranching family, the
late Mr, , Cravens attended
Howard Payne and the Uni-
versity of Southern California.
He was a long-time resident
of Brownwood before moving
to San Angelo several years
ago.
He died in a San Angelo
hospital Sunday morning af-
ter a long illness. Funeral ser-
vices were held in Wright's
Funeral Home here, with Dr.
Guy D. Newman officiating,
assisted by the Rev. Charlie
Morris. Burial was in Green- •>,
leaf Cemetery.
Juliet :;Mov&
To Westside Musical
.'t\V
The Music, Speech and
Drama Departments have join-
ed forces to bring to Howard
Payne "West Side Story," the
exciting tale of lovers in New,
York gangs—a love affair
which ends in death.
Presentation of the musical
will be Thursday, November
7, Saturday, November 9, and
Monday, November 11, at the
Brownwood Coliseum. A spe-
cial sneak preview has been
planned or chapel. ] f,.
Tickets for Thursday and
Monday's shows are $1.50, un-
reserved, and $2.50 or $2 re-
served. Saturday, all seat will
be reserved and will be $3.50,
$2.50 or $1.50.
Early reservations are re-
commended, especially for the
Saturday performance, which
was sold out for last year's
"Music Man."
Starring, in the show are
Cynthia Clawson, Mike Gilles-
pie, Steve Faulkner, Danny
Hernandez, Carol Humphrey
and Cricket McDonald.
<' Ai THE YELLOW JACKET
4 "Tfe® Voice Of The CamputfV
Texas Intercollegiate Press Association Member
II ft llPii 9 Circulation 1000
Believing that freedom is a gift and not a
ing that the responsibility to defend freedom
enjoy"
i right, and maintain-
falls upon those who
its profits, this newspaper is dedicated to the task of uplift
ing and preserving the privileges of a free people living in a free
nation with', freedom of the 'press. , <, '
§;J Mm ■ EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor
Assistant Editor
fSSZ^£z==i
Johnny Curtis
Gene Deason
Don Wigley
Bruce Kirby, Mike Wol ^ _
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Opinion '68
When Does Protest Become Disorder?*
BY JOHNNY CURTIS
: . i \ Yellow Jacket Ediior
Continuing with national
problems of especial concern
to young people, the Opinion
'68 poll this week asked How-
ard Payne students the follow-
ing question:
"At what point does the
right of protest develop into
civil disorder?" -
Here are what a representa-
tive group of our students
think:
ERIC WHITFIELD, fresh-
man, Norwalk, Calif.—When
the right of the protester, or
what he believes to be his
right, conflicts with the rights
of society or an individual.
JOHN GILBERT, sopho-
more, Austin—When it jeopar-
dizes state, federal and con-
stitutional laws.
GENE LANGKOP, sopho-
more, Dallas—When people in-
fringe upon other people's
rights and well being in the
course of their protest, wheth-
er the cause is just or not.
That, is the reason for freedom
of speech, freedom of the
press, and the right to peti-
tion. But these freedoms end
when they limit or endanger
the freedoms and safety of
others.
CARL LOYD, freshman,
San Antonio—When the pro-
testers take the laW into their
own hands and infringe on the
rights of others, destroying
property and injuring others.
Along with the right goes the
responsibility of keeping pro-
test peaceful and in order;
KEN LAWLER, sophomore,
Ft. Worth—When the rights,
lives and property of other
citizens are endangered by the
protests.
PHIL PACKER, junior, Dal-
las—Civil disorder takes place
when a law is broken by a
person, group or individual
and someone's rights are in-
fringed upon. „ ,
JERRY ENGLISH, senior,
Vancouver, Wash—The right
of protest is a privilege which
when turned from protest, in-
to riot and|or loses its purpose
and a foreset goal, allows ex-
ploitation of the confines of
law afore set, which said per-
sons involved originally creat-
ed.
ROY FRANKLIN. senior,
Valley Mills—When the pro-
testers take the law in their
own hands. When the rights
of others are neglected and
the people become, the vic-
tims of civil disorder. As long
as they are in the confines of
the long peaceful protest it
is right and good. When laws
are broken, then it becomes
a civil disorder.
KAREN BRAND, sopho-
more, McAllen—I've lalways
been taught that where my
nose begins, the other guy's
rights end and vise-versa.
When the protester begins
hurting other people and their
rights in order to selfishly ob-
tain his own, the right of pro-
test has become civil disorder.
JEAN SPIES, senior, River-
ton, Wyo.—-At the point where
it begins to infringe on the
right of another person. In
other words, when a protes-
ter injuries another person,
destroys his property, or des-
troys public property, his pro-
test has become civil disorder.
Campus Revival Heads BSU Council Plans
Two parties and the naming
of chairmeh for the December
Campus Revival topped the
business this week during the
BSU Executive Council meet-
ing.
A' Halloween party Friday,
October 25, at 7:30 in Mims
Auditorium ' will feature the
Vincent Price movie, "The Pit
and the Pendulum," with free
admission and ice cream. BSU
will also sponsor- in conjunc-
tion with the Student Senate
ft , 2ri '♦Listening
Party" as Howard Payne
meets East Texas .State.
Wayne Williams, chairman
of the December Campus- Re-
vival, presented committee
chairman for the Revival, in-:
eluding' John Gilbert, \ishers;
Roland Hodge, arrangements;
Dianne Blair, publicity; ? Rod*
ney Craig, hospitality; Linda
Bliss, reception;' Ken Jinks,
spiritual preparation; Barbie
Murrell, theme interpretation;
Gaify: Manning, • tiftifeie/^' -U ■
The Council advised
that radio programs with mem-
bers of the Pilbrlm 20, a folk
singing group from Kansas
and Nebraska are being plan-
ned, and that the Echo's dead-
line for publication in the No-
vember 1 issue is October 28.
«rsr
Woman was made from the
rib of man. She Was not made
from his head to top - him,
nor out of his feet to be
trampled upon. But out of his
side to be equal to him; un-
der his arm to be protected;
and riear-his heiut* tt hi? lovtd.
jji;
'£* *5*
m
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The Howard Payne College Yellow Jacket (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 6, Ed. 1 Friday, October 25, 1968, newspaper, October 25, 1968; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth128587/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Howard Payne University Library.