The San Antonio College Ranger (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 1, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 10, 1968 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Ranger and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the San Antonio College.
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Sorority and President
Selective Service
Handbook Outlines
Student Center Rules
Alpha Delta Phi
Paula Hagemeister
Beta Alpha Omega
Patti Mcllhenny
Kappa Phi Omega
Janie Guthrie
Pi Gamma Phi
Paula Greenfield
Rho Delta Chi
Linda Dodgen
Theta Kappa Chi
Susan Dusek
res-
care
;■
|
Morrison Collection
Shares Founding
With San Antonio
Students wanting their draft
boards notified of their Fall Se-
mester enrollment must report
their Selective Service number
to the Registrar’s Office prior to
September 23. Those who have
turned in their complete Num-
ber need not report it again.
Questions should be directed to
Mr. Wilbur Dennis, Registrar,
or Mrs. Phyllis McCarley, Assis-
tant.
Dr. Jerome F. Weynand
and Mr. Henry Webb, Director
of Student Activities, are ready
to advise and assist school or-
ganizations plan their activities
for the year.
Many aids and facilities are
available for SAC students and
their clubs at the Student Activi-
ties Office located in the Loftin
Student Center. Dr. Jerome Wey-
nand, Dean of Student Affairs,
L
The office also provides infor-
mation concerning the use of
rooms for club meetings and the
reservation of the El Alamo
Room for dances and social af-
fairs. Mr. Webb is responsible
for handling all club events, and
approves all activities.
Disciplinary actions are handled
by Dr. Weynand, as well as cor-
respondence and counseling for
international students.
San Antonio, celebrating its
250th year, shares its founding
with the publication date of
many books in the Lois Goddard
Morrison Collection of Eighteen-
th Century English Literature,
now in the Baskin Room of the
SAC Library.
In the collection are several
works by authors such as Alex-
ander Pope and Richard Steele,
printed in 1718, the year San An-
tonio was founded.
The Morrison Collection is
made up of some 11,000 works
including poetry, political pam-
phlets and historical writings.
“There was very little fiction
written in the 1700’s,” explained
Mr. J. O. Wallace, library direc-
tor, “so few of the collection are
fiction.”
Presently the collection is be-
ing catelogued, but the works
will be available to students.
Movie-going students can pur-
chase a
for $1
desk of
time fee allows admittance to all
Interstate Theatres for a fraction
of the regular price.
All lost and found articles are
also to be turned in and claimed
at the Activities Office. Students
should report all thefts here.
Another service provided for
students by the Affairs Office is
a check room located between
the snack bar and the El Alamo
Room. Students may check their
books, coats, and other supplies
free of charge. However, purses
and objects of value can not be
checked.
Today, as always, the Loftin
Student Center is a favorite gath-
ering place for SAC students.
Eating facilities as well as lounge
areas are provided in a non-
academic atmosphere for student
relaxation. In order that the
building’s beauty be preserved
and the center prove more en-
joyable, the Student Council has
■ set down several rules to be ob-
. served by everyone.
Mr. Henry Webb, Director of
Student Activities, who is
ponsible for the use and
of the building asks that each
individual help prevent the
thoughtless defacing of the fur-
niture and floors. The Student
Council, who enforces the rules
concerning the center, stresses
that food and drinks be kept out
of the lounge area. Receptacles
have been provided for litter and
cigarettes. Other rules concerning
the building are specifically out-
lined in the SAC Student Hand-
book which is available free of
charge on registration day.
tonio
trict.
Originally from Houston, Mr.
Claude Gause' now calls San An-
tonio his home. For the past six
yfears he was principal in the
South San Independent School
District. He received his Bache-
lor of Music at Sam Houston State
and Master of Education from
Our Lady of the Lake.
Mr. Bill Leikam has only been in
Texas a few months, coming
from a counseling job in Okla-
homa., He obtained his Master of
Edyx/ation from the University of
^Oklahoma and did undergrad-
uate work at Oklahoma Baptist
University.
Movie-Discount Card
at the information
the office. This one-
Student Affairs Office Offers
Counseling Adds Numerous Services fo SACifes
Three to Staff
Three new members have been
added to the counseling and
guidance staff. They are Mrs.
Alice Chacon, Mr. Claude Gause
and Mr. Bill Leikam.
Mrs. Chacon was a member of
the SAC reading staff before as-
suming her new role as coun-
selor. Mrs. Chacon, a SAC alum-
ni, did graduate work at Our
Lady of the Lake College and
taught 12 years in the San An-
Independent School Dis-
College Adds Four Courses
I
1
Mr. Henry Webb
list.
From the time a student signs
the list until she leaves the tradi-
tional Rush Tea she is asked to
maintain “Rush Silence.” No
member of any sorority or any
To Technical Curricula
same as those for academic de-
gree plans. All of the courses are
on a two-year basis and lead to
an Associate, Degree in Applied
Science.
The Rush Tea will take place in
the Fiesta Ballroom from 5 p.m.
to 7 p.m. on October 16. Pledging
will take place from October 21
to November 1. The sorority
handbook will list all rules and
regulations regarding Pledge
Week.
Rush Convocation will be held
at 7:30 p.m., October 7 in the
Fiesta Ballroom. During this
time the girls will fill out all
required forms and learn about
Federal, state, and San Anto-
nio Union Junior College district
funds are used to support the
technical program. The modern
building and equipment such as
computers, X-ray machines, and
typewriters are paid for with
these funds.
“A modern, functional building,
outstanding instructional equip-
ment, an excellent faculty, and
good students” are a few of the
reasons Clarkson Groos, director
of Technical Education, thinks
SAC has “one of the best techni-
cal programs offered anywhere.”
' J
■1
■
Ml
llebb Outlines Rush Events
Signing of the Rush List will
begin October 3. Sorority hand-
books containing information on
all six campus sororities will be
issued to all rushees signing the
the basic rules and regulations
of the sororities. A fee of $1
will be collected from every
rushee in order to finance rush
activities.
"“Sorority Information Night,
which will take place at 7:30
■ m, on September 30 in the Fies-
t ■p-ijroom, Is one pf the new
. activities planned for this
year.
“This meeting,” according to
Mr. Henry Webb, Director of
Student Activities, “will give ev-
ery girl a chance to come and
see what it is all about even if
she is not, sure she would like to rushee may discuss sorority life
join a sorority.” during this time.
Law enforcement, fire sci-
ence, construction technology, and
architectural technology are new
programs adcied to the technical
curricula this year. Recognizing
r the need for more qualified peo-
ple in these areas, the College
has adopted these courses open
to both full and part-time stu-
dents.
Other programs include air con-
ditioning and refrigeration, busi-
ness technology, data processing,
dental assisting, drafting, elec-
/ironies, medical assisting, mid-
C'l management, mortuary science,
nursing, and radio broadcasting.
C Instrumentation and control is a
* course offered to Evening Divi-
sion only.
Admission • requirements for
the technical programs are the
■
11
11
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Ultra-Modern Aids
In Library Building
It doubled the classroom space.
The newest addition to the Col-
lege landscape and consequently
a main attraction on campus, the
new, seven-story Library Build-
ing accomodates 64 classrooms, 84
faculty offices, study areas, a
snack bar and a meeting room
complete with its own kitchen.
Located on the second floor
are the card catalogs, circulation
desks, and bibliographical tools.
Other conveniences include a
copying machine in the reading
area with telephones and study
areas provided in front.
On the third floor are the ref-
erence and general service desk
along with auxiliary references,
dictionaries and college catalogs.
Other locations are designated for
group studies and meeting areas.
Audio-visual equipment, micro-
film, listening facilities, and a
collection of recordings are found
on the fourth floor. Adjoining
the audio-visual center is a 60
seat language lab and the Jane
Baskin Room housing rare books
and special collections. Faculty
offices and classrooms fill the
remaining three floors.
Each of the floors are accessi-
ble by elevators, escalators, and
stairs except for the basement
floor which can be reached only
by elevator or stairway.
No News; Reporters Few
Enjoy it while you can; it won’t
be here next week.
Complications arose when the
journalism department attempted
to produce a four-page newspa-
per for the first day of registra-
tion. The department encountered
such difficulties as learning that
important people with important
information were on vacation;
clubs which are normally active
during the school year were in-
active during summer; and that
interviewing, writing headlines
and meeting deadlines can be ex-
tremely trying—especially when
there were only six to do the
work.
So please try to understand
why The Ranger won’t be on the
newstand again until September
27.
Four Programs Aid
Student Financially
Designed to help those students
who are financially unable to
pursue a college education are
programs under the direction of
Mr. William Waterman, director
of student aid.
The work-study program, lar-
gest of the four available, is the
only one that places or advises
placement of a student. On-cam-
pus jobs pay $1.25 an hour on
a 15-hour work week and vary
from clerical work to maintenance
aids. The student who works un-
der this program makes appro-
ximately $650 a year. He may
also work during the summer on
a 40-hour work week.
The national-defense loan, fed-
erally supported, and the Texas
Opportunity plan, state support-
ed, provide low interest deferred
■payments. The Educational Op-
portunity Grant, a three-year
program, provides loans to quali-
fying students. Scholarships, avail-
able under the College Scholar-
ship Program, averages $175
yearly.
All four programs are either
state or federally supported with
25 per cent of the student cost
provided by the College.
Ji
Sarah Hester
Sarah Hester Wins
UF Finalist Spot
Among the ten finalists in the
“Miss Fair Share” competition
for the United Fund is sopho-
more Sarah Hester. Selection of
“Miss Fair Share” will be today,
but the winner’s name will be
kept secret until the big United
Fund kick-off spectacular in Vil-
lita Assembly Hall, September 17.
“Sarah is like the average coed
who also has the rare combined
traits of scholarship excellence,
leadership qualities, beauty and
poise,” boasts Dr. Jerome Wey-
nand, Director of Student Affairs.
“Sarah has been a member of
the Student Council for the past
year serving faithfully and well
in every capacity to which she
is assigned,” states Mr. Henry
Webb, Director of Student Acti-
vities.
Besides being a MacAUister
Scholarship recipient, Sarah has
earned an A-record to date and
at the end of the Spring Semester
was placed on the highly selec-
tive Dean’s Honor Roll.
A committee of seven distin-
guished San Antonians will make
the selection, based on the nom-
inees’ attractiveness, poise, gen-
eral character and service to com-
pany, agency or community. In
addition, each girl will talk ap-
proximately a minute on one or
two subjects: “How I Felt When
I Learned That I Was A Final-
ist” or “How The United Fund
Campaign Is Conducted In Our
Organization.”
Tuesday, September 10, 1968
THE RANGER
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San Antonio College. The San Antonio College Ranger (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 1, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 10, 1968, newspaper, September 10, 1968; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1350305/m1/3/: accessed December 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting San Antonio College.