The Ranger (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 6, Ed. 1 Monday, November 24, 1958 Page: 2 of 4
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Monday^ November 24, 1958
THE RANGER
Page Two
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.Flo Ann Clark
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Jazz, Rock 7i Ro// Singers at SAC
BRING 10 EMPTY
SALEM or WINSTON
to
and
lies
SLIM LINE CIGARETTE LIGHTER
OFFER EXPIRES DEC. 15,1958
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Secretaries.
Sponsor—
Receive an Attractive
Salem or Winston
Nabor Cano
Edward Horn
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PACKS and 50*
Wo -4J- uite
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reading on a
handle the rod.
BUSINESS STAFF
Advertising Manager. -
Assistant: Fernando Ramirez
Circulation Manager.
Exchange Editor
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Jimmy, Tobi Cut Records
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in the world of entertainment. Better known to their classmates
Jimmy Fore and Betty Lou Cowger, these two are definitely
their way to singing careers.
Betty, who now has the only
live jazz radio program in San
Antonio, is under contract to a
local affiliate of Capitol and
Decca Record Company. She be-
gan singing professionally after
winning a contest during her
junior year in high school. Soon
after that she started appearing
regularly with Larry Herman’s
band. Since then, she has sung
with several bands around town
in most of the local night spots.
Betty has her own quintette
who accompany her on the bass,
drums, tenor saxophone, vibra-
harp, and piano. Her pianist was
with Lionel Hampton, the well-
known band leader, for almost
two years.
Betty Set For Tour
Although she is not touring
now, Betty has had offers from
several bands, all of whom agree
that she is one of the most prom-
ising female vocalists in the
country. Betty (as Tobi) has re-
cently agreed to go on tour with
Warren Covington’s Orchestra,
which is the old Tommy Dorsey
band. She will leave during De-
cember to become a featured vo-
calist. Her first record is due to
be cut soon.
Betty is a Liberal Arts major,
primarily interested in drama.
She has a definite goal—a one-
(Continued o» Page 3)
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Trinity Hosts Counsellors
Trinity University recently
cussed problems of counselling.
Dinner, at which administrators
from San Antonio schools dis-
cussed problems of counseling.
Representing San Antonio Col-
lege were Charles Breeden,
Warne Hallmark, Jerome Wey-
nand, Dr. Wayland Moody, Dean
Clyde Nail, and Dr. Lois Mor-
rison.
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FirLd-Lngs
Morrison Guest Speaker
Dean of Women Lois Morrison
was recently invited to speak at
a dinner honoring graduates of
Dale Carnegie’s self-improve-
ment course. Dr. Morrison, by the
way, is not a graduate of this
course. Her topic was “Human
Relations from the Heart.”
MuncVx/
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a tuxedo for the holiday season? (See
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BOOK STORE'
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signs that its spectacular rise will continue. At present there are
239 students majoring in engineering, but it is estimated that osly
about 20 per cent of these will actually complete a course of
study in engineering at a four- year institution.
Responsibility for coping with
this exploding enrollment and^at
the same time making sure that
each candidate for a degree in
engineering possesses the same
background upon his graduation
from San Antonio College that he
would receive in the first two
years of a senior college rests
with Mr. Duke, James Liq^oln
and Floyd Roland, members of
the physics and engineering
department.
These gentlemen recommend a
heavy load of courses in mathe-
matics, physics, chemistry, and
engineering. Within the engineer-
ing and physics departmen$*ihe
students may take such courses
as physics, heat and mechanics,
statics, surveying, sliderule, “and
engineering problems.
Mr. Duke, commenting upon
this rigorous training, emphasised
that ability alone w’asn’t enough.
“A lack of willingness to work is
the principal reason for the large
number of students who abandon
their original ambitions to be-
come engineers, and despite the
large number of students in en-
gineering, the demand is still
greater than the supply. Engineer-
ing remains one of the most prom-
ising fields open to young men
and women with ability and deter-
mination,” Mr. Duke concluded.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Editor-in-Chief William (Bill) Morris
Make-Up Editor. Karen Kirkland
News Editor Rosemary Jersig
Assistants: Jerry Turner, Peter van Leuven
Photographic Editor.... LeRoy Haws
Assistants: Ralph (Dusty) Smith, James Wilcox, Alfred
Casanova, Doran Williams
Sports Columnist .„...--------------------------------------David (Tex) Corn
Reporters Journalism 101 Class Members and Volunteers
Cartoonists George Calvert, William (Bill) Miles,
James Wogstad
CLERICAL STAFF
. Margaret Short, Marilyn Mangum
Mrs. Edith King
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If a member of the phyiscs department would measure
and compare the volume of sound emanating from Alamo
stadium during the Jeff-Highlands game with that from
the SAC library, all the smart money would be on the SAC
library to win hands down. During the crowded middle-
morning periods the noise becomes so deafening that it
even engulfs the normally tomb-like reference room in a
hub-bub.
Students genuinely interested in preparing for a class
are forced to retire to the lounge in the Fine Arts Building
or to an empty classroom. This is strictly the fault of the
students as James 0. Wallace and his staff cannot be ex-
pected to police the conversational habits of grown men
and women.
There are two rules governing conduct in the library
that should be followed by those who wish to be consider-
ate of their fellow students:
Talking is permitted in the reading room if it is done
in low voices and among small groups.
There should never be any talking in the reference
room.
The editors feel pretty foolish having to tell college
students to be quiet while in the library.
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Enrollment in the SAC engineering department skyrocketed to
an all-time high this year, and according to Leo S. Duke, chairman
of the combined engineering and physics department, there are good
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Jimmy Dee and Tobi Castle, two ex-Jefferson students
attending San Antonio College, are making a name for themselves
as
on
A group can spark an idea, but only an individual can
have one. As President Griswold, of Yale, has so aptly
asked: “Could Hamlet have been written by a committee ?
Or the Mona Lisa painted by a club ?”
Crawford H. Greenwait,
President, E. I. DuPont Co.
Z/ow
Do you have a cigarette lighter? (Save your Winston
and Salem packages)
Do you think for yourself? (Take today’s Viceroy test)
Do you need extra money? (See today’s Lucky Strike
ad)
Do you have
David Mills ad)
How about jewelry? (McNeel’s is the place)
Could you use an extra pair of slacks? (Go to Syd’s)
By their support, the firms whose advertisements
appear in this issue are helping make possible a better
newspaper and yearbook. Support your Ranger advertisers.
(special offer
King Guest Speaker
Mrs. Edith King attended a
regional meeting of the Inter-
scholastic League Press Confer-
ence in Georgetown on Saturday,
November 22, where she spoke
on advertising problems of stu-
dent publications.
Mrs. King is recognized na-
tionally as an authority on stu-
dent publications, winning many
awards for her accomplishments
in the field of student journal-
ism. She is particularly well-
known for her success with ad-
vertising campaigns, for in
more than 25 years her papers
have always made money.
Engineering Load Heavy
But Rewards Promising
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Published bi-weekly as a laboratory project of the journalism stu-
dents of San Antonio College. 1300 San Pedro Avenue, San Antonio 12,
Texas.
Represented for national advertising by National Advertising Service,
Inc., 420 Madison Avenue, New York.
a course
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Left to right, Dean Evans and Frank Silcock check the elevation
transit level as Donald Frost and Jerry Bro^n
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now
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San Antonio College. The Ranger (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 6, Ed. 1 Monday, November 24, 1958, newspaper, November 24, 1958; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1333575/m1/2/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting San Antonio College.