Leopard Tales (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, January 28, 1972 Page: 4 of 6
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*
at
«
Computer leased
for college needs
*
clothes
The amount per school is deter-
•s
$6 value
♦
$1.50 value
$5 value
Dictionaries
Fountain Pens
Stationery
Ring Binders
Office Supplies
Printing
Lamps
Harrison Legan, Owner
Zip
at 6th on Adams
Students boogie
at barefoot dance
Quality Clothes at
Discount Prices
Fashions For The
Whole Family
nationwide tonight which will feature a dance
campus crusade. The youth group
BSUers leave today
for mad-winter retreat
Printing is our business,
Our only business."
the recommendation of
committee.
summer and we began meeting
in homes.”
According to Garnett Frazier,
the computer is an IBM 360-22.
The computer can be used to print
out class roles, grades, store ACT
scores and “even give you your
horoscope or play tic-tac-toe.
RO
all
for
only $6
Student Aid Society, PO Box 39042
Friendship Station, Washington, D.C. 20016
Gentlemen: I enclose $6 for Study Abroad,
Vacation Study Abroad and annual dues.
Name
Address
City, State
• Paris, France, 1972
• 644 Pages
2108 West Ave. H
Temple, Texas
773-4464
"Your reference service
saved me much valuable
time which I put in on
other subjects. Result: 5
As and 1 B."
CN, Ann Arbor, Mich.
"The Vantage Point" is a
book put together by 5
ghost writers and edited
by LBJ. Your reference
service is almost like my
own personal ghost writer."
LC, Gainesville, Fla.
"The 3 reference books
of which every student
needs personal copies
are Study Abroad, a
good dictionary and
thesaurus. I got a $10,000
4-year scholarship from
Study Abroad."
AR, Berkeley, Calif.
Leonard Pietzsch
to attend meeting
Leonard Pietzsch, president
Temple Junior College
HIERONYMUS
Printing Company
L
YOUNGSTOWN SHOPPING CENTER
TEMPLE, TEXAS 76501
Fifty Baptist Student union mem-
bers will travel to Brownwood to-
day (Jan. 28) for their annual mid-
winter retreat.
Barbara Bulls, president, said
the retreat theme is “Christian
Life; Why and How.” Logan Cum-
mings, pastor at First Baptist
church in Brownwood and Robert
Campbell, director of religious
activities at Howard Payne college
will speak to Temple Junior col-
lege and representatives from
Central Texas college, Texas State
Technical institute and McLennan
Community college.
to young people.
As of yet “Action Group For
various On Saturdays we go out on the
street witnessing.
THRIFT
'HJ center
J
III |
U
tv
I
Randy Sefcik
a year older than most
group, - „ .
lical Brethren church, he explains
the “Action Group For Jesus” is
campus crusade. The youth group an^ show in the west gym
held a seminar at the First Baptist from 8-11 p.m.
church in Mobile, Ala. following
their return.
On lease from the IBM company
homes. Less than two months ago lege will be serving but in the is a new computer that is housed — Debbie Beach.
“Action Group For Jesus” opened next two years and it may well jn the Watson Technical center.
the “Lost and Found” in Temple find its way here,
at 116 South First Street.
Made up mostly of highschool
students from Temple and sur-
rounding towns they conducted a
youth revival at Little River
Methodist church not long after
their start.
The summer of 1971 representa-
tives went to San
Calif, to attend the
as master of ceremonies for the
evening.
Popular records
THE UNITED NATIONS EDUCATIONAL, SCIENTIFIC AND CULTURAL ORGANIZATION
A specialized agency of the United Nations dedicated to peace
and
THE STUDENT AID SOCIETY
a non-profit non-political organization dedicated
to helping students to help themselves
offer
STUDY ABROAD
• New 19th Edition
• Each copy is trilingual
in English, French and
Spanish
The most complete scholarship directory in the world lists more than
234,000 scholarships, fellowships, loans and grants in more than
129 countries or territories! Tells who is eligible, fields of study
financial assistance, HOW, WHEN AND WHERE TO APPLY! Reflects
the latest scholarship approach costed by financial need!
VACATION STUDY ABROAD
• Each copy is trilingual in English, French and Spanish
More and more Americans are flocking overseas for summer vaca-
tions, and an increasing proportion is young Americans! With the
price war now raging on overseas airfares, record-breaking numbers
of young Americans will surge across Europe this summer!
VACATION STUDY ABROAD tells how qualified people will go
free! Provides information on short courses, seminars, summer
schools, scholarships and travel grants available each year to
students, teachers and other young people and adults planning to
undertake study or training abroad during their vacations. These
data were provided by some 500 organizations in 54 countries!
STUDENT AID SOCIETY membership dues. Services offered:
• Scholarship information service.
Answers questions concerning scholarships worldwide!
• Travel service.
Plans interesting tours to exotic lands!
• Reference Service.
Drafts term papers, essays, book reports, theses, etc. frequent-
ly using primary sources available only in the Library of
Congress! We do not actually write the finished assignment
since that would deprive the student of valuable educational
experience and defeat the very purpose for writing for one-
self in the first place. We will provide background informa-
tion and bibliographies which rank with such tools as the
College Outline Series and encyclopaedia reference services
available only with expensive sets. Limit of one draft at
small additional charge, per semester per student in good
standing. We cannot answer any question which we feel
requires the advice of a doctor, lawyer, architect, engineer,
or other licensed practitioner, nor can we advise concerning
your financial investments. Neither can we undertake market
research or surveys or provide home study courses.
Unisex fashions, clothes worn
by both boys and girls, will be
Settled down to home, they have modeled by Temple Junior college
spent afternoons working for
money to finance their operations.
Open to young people, the group
Legislature adoption will net $200,000
for TJC technical education programs
Temple Junior college will re- Council for Technical - Vocational
A ceive $217,959 to operate its oc-
memory bank in the form of a cupational-technical education pro-
x 1 . Barefeet is the style for the disc machine can supply the in- grams if the legislature adopts
Bernadino, Spoken Arts club Sole Celebration formation that you want.” the recommendation of a joint
Frazier reports that the machine,
the only one of its type in the
Education and Coordinating Board,
Texas College and University Sys-
tem.
Current budget for the schools
is $18,062,253 of which $2,400,000
in “contingency” funds is allocat-
A budget of $28,118,827 to aid ed among schools on the basis of
area, is more efficient than the public junior colleges in financing need.
360-25 which was employed at the vocational-technical programs was
technical center until the new one recommended by the Texas Edu- mined by the number of hours a
arrived. cation agency, the State Advisory student spends with an instructor.
■ | | '| ■
youth and Popular records will provide
graduate of Rogers highschool, is music for the dance. The proceeds
of the wiH be used to buy a sweepstakes
A member of the Evange- trophy for the third annual Foren-
sics Festival.
Tickets are 75 cents for stag, $1
per couple and may be obtained
from any member of the Spoken
Arts club or at the door.
of
Student
government, will be attending a
state executive meeting on the
University of Texas campus today.
The meeting is being held to
discuss plans for the council’s
state meeting in April.
life
Will you vote?
Now for the first time, 18 year-olds are eligible to vote.
If you vote this year, what will you do?
Will you vote as a "Republican," a "Democrat," an "In-
dependent" or as "other party?" Who will be your candidate for
U. S. President in the 1972 election? Will it be Birch Bayh—Shirley
Chilsholm—Hubert Humphrey—Edward Kennedy—Ralph Nader-
George Wallace or Richard M. Nixon?
Will you vote to legalize marijuana and abortions? Will you
vote to abolish the permanent draft? These questions are some
to think about for us 18 year-olds (and others) — at least for those
who have registered to vote.
The political system in this country is locked up by the
I political parties. The Republicans and the Democrats seem to have
t. an unspoken agreement to say nothing during the campaign —
P to promise nothing very different. That's why we young people
p should cast our vote. Maybe we can "pull the rug out" from under
old politicians and their brand of politics. We can try to be a
E major voice in the parties and help straighten this country out.
In 1972, eight percent of the voting age population will be
made up of 18-to-21-year-olds. This may not seem like a large
percentage until you remember that in 1960 and in 1968 less
than one percent of the popular vote put the President into office.
We have the potential. All we have to do is cast our vote.
Deadline registration for the primary election is April 6.
Qualified voters will go to the booths May 6 for this election. The
general election is Oct. 7. Several national and state organizations,
newsmagazines and other media are running up-to-the-minute
articles, suggestions about registration, candidates and how to
overcome problems encountered. Lois of information is available
and lots of potential is prevalent. Why don't we all register now
so we can "get with it" like some of the senior adults haven't.
GET ITFROM.7.'"*A'4,*U^ >
■
men’s and women’s athletic teams
and other organizations. The
show will start at 9 p.m. with
has met requirements of becoming George White, TJC student and
a non-profit organization and re- manager of the Red Hanger, Ltd.,
ceives support from local business-
men and citizens.
Sefcik, a Seaton
Jesus movement heading
toward TJC through youth
by Charles Petree a non-denominational organization.
Religion and belief in God have “We used to meet two or three
lasted throughout ages making a nights a week but studies have
definite impression in history and kept it down to Thursday now,”
more recently the college campus, states Sefcik. “The meetings con-
The nation’s young people have sist of testimony, talks, Bible
betcome framed in a new aspect study, tapes and records. Some-
from the controversial
of God” communes to
Jesus movements.
Randy Sefcik, a freshman at “Action Group for Jesus” also
Temple Junior, is envolved in one publishes a twice-monthly papei’
of the more local aspects of this called “Truth” printed on a mimeo-
updated evangelism. Now a pre- graph purchased by doing odd
med student majoring in biology, jobs. They have a group called the
Sefcik has been with the “Action Jesus Band that has performed
Group for Jesus” since its start for events related to witnessing
in the summer of 1969.
It did not begin as an organiza-
tion explains Sefcik. “A bunch of Jesus” has not reached the Temple
us accepted Christ at the James college campus. But in the next
Robinson crusade in Temple that two years it may be here.
As of yet “Action Group For
Jesus” has not reached the Tem-
The organization continued to pie college campus. The organiza-
grow and the talks and studies tion’s membership consists of the
had to divide and meet in several same students Temple Junior col-
« A J - 5
“Children times one of us talks to the group,
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Leopard Tales (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, January 28, 1972, newspaper, January 28, 1972; Temple, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1380020/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Temple College.