The Ranger (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 3, Ed. 1 Friday, October 23, 1964 Page: 1 of 6
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If it’s within range, it’s within The Ranger
Vol. XXXIX—No. 3
San Antonio, Texas
Friday, October 23, 1964
Neal Memorial Fund Moon Show Next
Aids SAC Students
I
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20.
One Gift Works Many Wonders I
Council Donates $100
To United Fund Drive
A scholarship check for $5,840.60
was presented to San Antonio Col-
lege by the San Antonio Elemen-
tary Principals and Supervisors.
The first recipient of the grant
given in memory of Miss Elma A.
Neal, assistant superintendent of
the San Antonio Independent
School District, is Shannon Fowler.
Candidates for the scholarship
must be students majoring in ele-
mentary school teaching.
Miss Ida Mae Glover, who pre-
sented the check to Dr. Wayland
Moody, announced that the schol-
arship is perpetual since only the
interest on the award is to be used
each year.
ginia Lea Wood, and Rene Deput-
ron.
can
Theta
Lambda Epislon Phi led the fra-
ternities by pledging 38 new mem-
bers including Robert Angricano,
Homer Arias, Pete Cardenas, Mar-
tin Cardona, Julio Castro, Edward
(Continued on Page 5)
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Exactly 221 students joined the
social circle of SAC last week. A
total of 123 girls accepted invita-
tions from the six sororities, while
four fraternities supervised the
pledge antics of 98 new members.
Pi Gamma Phi has the most
pledges among the sororities with
28 new members. They are Judy
Allison, Billye Kay Clark, Susan
Clark, Jane Cotton, Fredilyn Cun-
dieff, Barbara Forcum, Jackie Gas-
chen, and Sharon Gaskill.
-----4-----
Little Heads Sorority
Theta Kappa Chi sorority has
* elected officers for the 1964 fall
semester. They are Bonnie Little,
president; Geri Gray, vice-presi-
dent; Gayle Martin, secretary; Pa-
tricia Chapman, treasurer; Patricia
Lawson, pledge mistress; Carol
Drain, parliamentarian; Nancy Cal-
laway, chaplain; and Jan Hart, his-
torian-reporter.
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Toward $1,000 Goal
The Student Council has con-
tributed $100 to the United Fund
in an effort to spur the students
toward a $1,000 goal for SAC. The
campaign for student donations be-
gins next Monday, October 26, and
lasts through November 6.
Members of the Inter Fraternity-
Sorority Council will interrupt
classes at times designated to reach
each - student once. According to
statistics released by the United
Fund, for two years SAC teach-
ers and students of both the Day
and Evening Divisions contributed
more than half of the total con-
tributed by all other local colleges
and private institutions.
Other fund-raising plans include
a powder-puff football game be-
tween sorority pledges and old
club members. The “teams” will
play at San Pedro Park on the aft-
ernoon of November 3. Donations
will be collected. Still another
money-making project of the Stu-
dent Council is a pair of noon-day
dances from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
on October 28 and 29.
Although last year’s contribution
amounted to $580, the Student
Council feels that the increase of
students will be instrumental in
meeting the $1,000 goal.
“San Antonio has provided this
school for our benefit. We can help
the community through the United
Fund,” says Ronald Smith, Student
Council publicity chairman.
Others are Dixie Gillespie,
Sheryl Greenhaw, Judy Gutierrez,
Linda Harding, Glynda Hawkins,
Cynthia Kirby, Peggy James, Re-
becca Limon, and Louise Mont-
I gomery.
Also Maria Moreno, Jane Ann
Morgan, Rin-Dee Nueendorff, Ida
Ruth, Thelma Talvaro, Sandy Van-
zant, Janice Weichlein, Sandra Kay
Wenzel, Patricia Williams, Vir-
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Pennario Entertains
Students, Faculty
At Tuesday Musical
San Antonio College students and
faculiy will be the guests of the
Tuesday Musical Club on October
27, at 3 p.m., in McAllister' Au-
ditorium, when they present Leon-
ard Pennario. Students and faculty
need only to show their activity
cards for admission.
Reichele, and Virginia Stanley.
On November 17, at the Mother-
Daughter Banquet, pledges of
Theta Kappa Chi will be inducted
and presented with their drops.
Pledges include Sarah Austin, Pa-
tricia Boeselt, Janice Bush, An-
drea Chabak, Cynthia Chaffin,
Cathy Coulter, Sherry Dubose,
Rachel Elias, Nancy Goodwin, Peg-
gy Greene, Karen Henckel, and
'Karen Kennedy.
Others joining are Barbara
Kirkpatrick, Diane Kleinburg,
Sheralyn Koppa, Louise Loeffler,
Patricia McCaleb, Sue Neilson,
Linda Nutt, Mary Thomas, Kath-
ryn Toman, and Diane Weber.
Theta Kappa Chi girls ushered
at the Saturday evening perform-
ance of “Macbeth” October 17.
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Traditional drops were presented
at this time. New members are
Eva Farish, Cheryl Lansing, Jean-
ne Chestnut, Jean Carter, Ruth
Lucchella, Barbara Hughes, Sonia
Wilson, Margaret Mayhall, and
Phyllis Mayfield. Others include
Sue Bacon, Susan Gant, Michele
Stockert, Cinde Heinemeir, Car-
olyn Eads, Ursula Jaeckle, Cherry
DeShongj and Diana McDonald.
Twenty pledges are to be for-
mally received into Beta Alpha
Omega on November 3. At this
time initiates will receive their
drops, and beaus will get their
pins.
The pledges, some of whom
ushered for “Macbeth” on October
15, are Donnye Barnett, Joyce
Bateman, Kathryn Burney, Joyce
Ann Chiles, Linda George, Mary
Nell Hoover, Mary Hughes, Elaine
Moore, Elaine Jones, Pattie
Knight, and Patricia Marbach.
Thetas Feature
Parisian Theme
Al Ball Tonight
“Evening in Paris” will be the
theme of the Theta Kappa Chi
semi-formal dance tonight in the
Shangri-la '(Ballroom.; A replica
of the Champs Elysees will serve
as the entrance, and couples will
be seated in the atmosphere of a
Paris sidewalk cafe.
The sounds of the Rockin’ T-
Birds will offer dancing music
from 7:30 until 11:30, and the The-
ta Kappa Chi pledges will perform
a skit during the combo’s inter-
mission.
Sorority President Bonnie Little
set the price of bids for the dance
at $1.50, and stated that they
be purchased from any
member or pledge.
------4------
Meet your Council officers at the
assembly on November 3.
At Planetarium
“The Moon—Earth’s Biggest Sat-
telite” is the title of the November
Planetarium Show which will be-
gin with a demonstration of man’s
knowledge of the Moon from the
earliest and simplest concepts to
today’s large fund of information.
Topics will relate to the Moon’s
appearance in different phases,
eclipses such as the one on Decem-
ber 19 and physical characteristics.
The show will end with an inter-
pretation of the most recent infor-
mation from the Ranger 7.
At 16:50 Universal Time on July
28 an Atlas Agena B booster pro-
pelled the Ranger 7 off its launch-
ing pad into space. The outcome
of this, historic spaceflight was a
series of the best lunar photo-
graphs ever made. The pictures
were made on July 31 during the
last 16 minutes and 40 seconds of
the flight. More than 4.000 close-up
views were transmitted from Ran-
ger 7 to the Goldstone tracking
station in California. Much infor-
mation has already been released
concerning these photos and it will
be passed on to the Planetarium
visitors this month.
Public shows are on Sundays at
6:30 and 8 p. m. and on Thurs-
day evenings at 8 p. m. except on
Thanksgiving Day. Admission
charge to students is free upon
presentation of library cards.
Charge for adults is 50 cents and
for children is 20 cents.
------4------
Potential Authors
Form Organization
The Readers and Writers Club,
the only SAC group which boasts
a constitution in verse, held its
organizational meeting on October
13.
Mr. John Igo, sponsor, initiated
plans for a school-wide literary
contest. Paul Deglau was appoint-
ed student chairman and Student
Council representative: Martha Si-
fuentes was appointed reporter.
Anyone who is now writing or
planning to write short stories,
poems, or novels is invited to at-
tend meetings every Tuesday at 3
p. m. in Room 20 of the Main
Building.
ONE GIFT
FOR 57 AGENCIES
San Antonio and Bexar County
Formal Initiations Follow Sorority, Fraternity Pledging
Others are Darleen Meyer, Ann
Mills, Ellen Ragsdale, Rosemary
Rethmann, Cynthia Straw, Janie
Thompson, Susan Whidden, Irene
Wilder, and Mei Ling Wong.
Pledges of Rho Delta Ohi are
Kay Brooks, Sheryl Brooks, Mi-
chele Brown, Marcella Burk, Lu-
cille Gregory, Laura Mills, and
Judith Pirotina. Gwen Turner,
Marsha Lee Matts, Janis Smith,
Sandra Smith, Mary Frances Wil-
liamson, Betty Pfeil, and Yolanda
Gonzales also are new members.
All served as ushers for “Macbeth”
at the . matinee preformance on
October 17.
fy, mts
A candlelight ceremony high-
lighted the initiation of Alpha
Delta Phi pledges, October
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4 * 7
The sorority gave a Mother-
Daughter Tea, Sunday, October 18.
At this time the pledges were
honored with a get-acquainted
slumber party.
October 27 is the date set for
Sigma Phi pledges to be initiated
formally and to receive their
drops. New members, who also re-
ceived Sigma Phi sweatshirts after
pledge week, include Barbara
Adams, Diane Aguirre, Martha
Beseth, Patricia Blankenship, Su-
san Buechele, Nancy Casper, Lin-
da Cooper, Ann Careel, Geri Es-
sock, and Dorothy Favella.
Others are Kathy Frederickson,
Elizabeth Guerro, Kimberely
Hartzfield, Betty Hodgkins, Karen
Hunt, Peggy Jacobs, Lenetta Ly-
ons, Jeanette Morton, Barbara
Motz, Susan Persons, Lana Sue
Mr. Pennario is a “world re-
nown pianist who will astonish
his listeners by his effortless tech-
niques and above all his eminent
musicality.”
A list of triumphs unmatched
by his contemporaries and equal-
led only by a few elder statesmen
of music is tangible evidence of
M r . Pennario’s ‘pre-eminence o n
the international concert scene to-
day.
He has received such acclaim as
“an extraordinarily refined artist
with fingers as agile, and a mind
as subtle as those of the very great
pianists memory can recall.”
The Tuesday Musical Club, old-
est musical organization in the
city, presents Mr. Pennario in an
effort to bring good music to the
San Antonio area.
GIVE THE UNITED WAY
FS-—
Yl’
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i
Misses Ida Mae Glover, Ruth Moynahan, and Georgia Smith award
Miss Sharon Fowler the first Elma Neal Memorial Scholarship to
come from interest on a $5,840.60 check.
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San Antonio College. The Ranger (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 3, Ed. 1 Friday, October 23, 1964, newspaper, October 23, 1964; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1350230/m1/1/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting San Antonio College.