The J-TAC (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 20, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 15, 1960 Page: 8 of 8
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PAGE EIGHT
THE J-TAC
TUESDAY, MARCH 15, 1060
Registrar Announces Names of
161 Prospects for Graduation
The largest graduating class in
tarleton State College history has
fteen announced by .Registrar Stu-
art Chilton. There are 161 candi-
dates for Associate in Science Di-
plomas in May, Of this number
four completed their work last
August, and 13 finished in Janu-
ary,
The remaining candidates are to
complete their work at the end of
this semester.
.Tarleton gives diplomas only
<mce each year.
TSC- gave 161 diplomas in 1936
also, but that number included di-
plomas given to academic students.
The previous high for strictly
college diplomas was 136 in 1958.
The ten honor graduates will
be announced after the nine weeks
grading period.
The candidates, their major, and
their hometown: Jerry Don Aaron,
industrial arts, Rising Star; Gary
•'Arlen Abbott, electrical engineer-
ing, Brownwood; Fred Wayne Al-
trecht, wildlife management, Go
liad; Lewis B. Allen, vocational ag
i-ieulture, Uvalde; Darrell Paige
Baker, agricultural education, Bur-
net; Gary Grant Barham, journa-
lism, Kermit; John Edgar Barham,
business administration, Stephen-
ville; Judith Ann Barham, ele-
mentary education, Stephenville;
Gary Allen Batte, agricultural ed-
ucation, Italy; Judy Lind Bell,
business administration, Stephen-
ville; Arthur Weston Berglund,
I'ange management, Perry Point.
Md,; Tommy Richard Biggs, civil
engineering, Granbury; Robert
Eric Bigham, civil engineering,
Lampasas; Richard Bryant Boyd,
Business administration, Stephen-
ville; Jerry Max Brooks, plant and
Soil science, Tolar;
Elizabeth Anne Brown, medical
technology, Stephenville; J. C.
Brown, agricultural econ o m i c s ,
.Florence; Barbara Ruth Burke,
business administration, Richard-
son; Frankie Don Burkluirt, agri-
cultural economics, .Thalia.
Russell Gl'adwin Burwell, pre-'
law, Stephenville; ,Carl Eugene
JJuthi, civil, engineering, Valley
Mills; Jo Ellen Caddell, business
administration, Dallas; Hugh Ar-
vell Campbell, (secondary educa-
tion, Robstown; Marilyn Cantrell,
Business administration, Stephen-
ville; Calvin Marshall Caraway,
'agricultural economics, De Leon;
Jerry Young Carothera, engineer-
ing, Lometa; Cynthia Dean Car-
ioll, medical technology, Gates-
ville.
William Richard Carson, range
management, Stamford; Wayne
Charles Case, engineering, Ver-
non; Gloria La Verne Cates, ele-
itoentary education, Kaufman;
Judith Lynn Cato, chemistry, Ste-
jJhenvill'e; Dee David Chatfield,
physical education, Bellville; Wal-
ter Nicholas Clapp, liberal arts,
Stephenville.
Edgar Persons Clark vocational
agriculture, Port Worth;. Gene
Nelson Clarlc, pre-veterinary Fort
Worth; Verne Stanley Cook, in-
dustrial arts, Ranger; Joy Lynn
Cornell, English, Stephenville;
Bfary Beth Cornell, elementary
education, Stepihenville; James
"Warren Cowan, civil engineernig,
©lifton; James Delane Cross, lib-
eral arts, Flainview.
Franklin Blake Curl, business
administration, Tolar; David
James Dill, agriculture, Corsi-
cana; Eddie Shelton Dixon, ag-
riculture, Kermit; Nancy Jeanette
. Driver, 'home economics, Cleburne;
John Casper Drolla, pre-law, Fort
Worth; Donna Jean, Edgmon, soc-
laL^w'ences, Midland; Sara Lay-
Sfi^JJSftttahl, business- administra-
^iion', Stamford.
. Charles Andrew - Elliott, bttsi-
■ rtess administration, Stephenville;
Walter Thomas Falls, pre-veterin-
ary, Snyder; Sturley Canq Fist,
, agricultural education, Valley
Mill's; Clyde Rodney Flanagan,
pre-veterinary, Ballingcr; Rodney
Durwood Fulcher, physical educa-
tion ,Slaton; Thomas Carroll Gee,
English, Dublin; Thomas Wei don
Glasgow, business administration
Stephenville.
Peggy Jean Godfrey, home ec-
onomics, Comanche; Guy Autry
Golden, liberal arts, Stephenville;
Rodmani Edward Gorman, pre-
law, Houston; Betty Jo Gregory,
business administration, Abilene;
Wylie Keith Hannah, liberal arts,
Vernon; Linda Ruth Harral, phy-
sical education, Rankin; Charles
William Hartman, vocational ag-
ricluture, Llano.
Garvin Elmer Hendon, agricul-
tural education, Stephenivlle;
Jean Lucile Hendrix, art, Brown-
wood; Michael Kirk Hendrix,
engineering, Fort Worth; Gordon
Wilburn Hinds, vocational agri-
culture, Pecos; Clifford Edward
Hoelscher, entomology, Burling-
ton; .Valton Rohr Hoffman, ag-
ricultural education, Talpa; Don
Vernon Holley, agricultural
engineering Hico.
, Laura Suzanne Howell, ele-
mentary education, Dublin; An ice
Hudson, business, administration,
Dublin; Eula Eugene Johnson,
business administration, Quanah;
Larry Ray Jones, pre-law, Ste-
phenville; Lynn La Roque Jones,
liberal arts, Stephenville; Martha
Ann Jones, physical' education,
Dublin.
Nancy La Nell Jones, element--
ary education, Stephenville; Rob-
ert Dudley Jorlan, engineering
Goldthwaite; Tommy Warren
Kemp, pre-law, Purmela; Bennie
Wilson Knape, agricultural- ed-
ucation, Sherman; Lendol Wayne
Lamb, secondary education, De
Leon; Toby Lee Landman, busi-
ness administration, For Wotrh;
Arlee Ross Leifeste, electrical eng-
ineering, Art.
Ferel Royce Little, social scien-
ces, Stephenville; Hoyt Dewayne
Lovelace, physical education, Knox
City; Jerry Martin Lowrance,
agricultural engineering, Waco;
Brenda Louise McCIeskey, Eng-
lish, Lipan; Laramie Elwyn Mc-
Entire, range management, Com-
anche; Nancy Lee Mclnnis, ele-
mentary education, Stephenville;
James Calvin McKenzie, pre-law,
Midland.
Linda Lee McLendon, business
administration, Hico; Charles
William McMenamy, business ad-
ministration, McKinney; Eva
Janetto McPherson, business .ad-
ministration, . Stephenville; Juan
Luis Marciacq, agricultural engi-
neering, Panama, Panama; Will-
iam Fisher Martin, social scien-
ces, Pecos; Jimmy Ray Massey,
biology, Mart; Jerry Wayne Mill-
er, physical education, McKinney.
Marilyn Miniarcl, physical ed-
ucation, Stephenville; Gary Roger
Mitchell, civil engineering, Evant;
Montie Gene Monzingo, liberal
arts, Stamford; Henry Clifford
Moreland, mechanical engineer-
ing, Kingsland; Michael Martin
Morse, social sciences, Killeen;
Priseilla Marlene Morton, music
education, Stephenville, John Mar-
shall' Niekell, wildlife manage-
ment, Burleson.
Shirley Nelle Oates, physical
education, Brog©r; James Ray
Oden, business administration,
Comanche; Charles Kim Orrell,
pre-veterinary, Burleson; Lendon
Royce Parker, range management,
Kerrville; Jorge Eduardo Parr,
vocational agriculture, Havana,
Cuba; Robert Allan Perry, math-
ematics, aBngs; Thomas Doyle
Pittman,. chemistry, May.
Darrell Gene Porter, math-
ematics, Granbury; Joe Tom Pur-
cell, civil engineering, Dublin;
Joyce Delaine Ramsey, business
administration, Mineral Wells;
Dickie Van Reod. animal husban-
dry, Dublin; James Ju'Ward
Rivers, pre-law, Kili'een; Jimmy
Wayne Roberson, agricultural ed-
ucation, Stephenville,
William Robert Sandford, pre-
law, San Antonio-; Georgia Rae
Schermer, engineering, Stephen-
ville; Lita Ann Schneeberg, lib-
eral arts, Fort Worth; Marilyn
Joyce Schoof, home economics-
busineas administration, Fort
Worth; Thomas Milton Schroeder,
pre-law, Kiileen; John Richard
Scott, vocational agriculture, Fort
Worth; Helien Faye S'imith, busi-
ness administration • ,Mart.
Kay Ann Smith, art, Stephen-
ville; Martha Sue Smith, element-
ary education, Austin; Phyllis
Ellen Smith, zoology, Fort Worth;
John Howard Striegler, engineer-
Inng, Stephenville; Norma • Sue
Teague, business administration,
Stephenville; Forrest Don Tem-
ple ton, chemistry, Dublin; Virgin-
ia Ann Templeton, home econom-
ies, Lorainc,
Barbara Nell Umphres, liberal
arts, Dublin; Howell Andreas
Wall, advertising and public re-
lations, Dallas; Lewis Harlan
Webb, business administration,
Crawford; Virginia Jo Webb,
business administration, Winters;
Claude Dale Williams, industrial
arts, Sundown; Morris Lec-roy
Williamson, electrical engineering,
Granbury.
Henry Franklin Wood, business
a d m> i ni s t r atio n, Stephenville
Linda Lea Woods, home economics,
Do Leon; John Allen Wright,
industrial arts, Murray; Wayford
Don Yancy, industrial arts, Ste-
phenville; Nancy Louise Young,
secondary education, Bluff Dale.
The students that graduated
August 28, 1959, are: James Paul
P e d e r s o n, physical therapy,
Hamilton; Cecil Don Stone, Eng-
lish, Stephenvill'c; Cecil Robert
Tate, business administration,
Hamilton; and J. Michael Wilk-
erson, agronomy, De leon.
The following students gradu-
ated January 28, 1960: James
Monroe, Angell, social sciences,
Stephenville; Thomas Sanford
Barton, animal husbandry, Mon-
ahans; Gathern Dale Elliott, bus-
iness administration, .Stephenville,
James Lowell Fowies, agriculture,
Stephenville; Charlene Wanda
Gel-hart, elementary education,
Loneta; Jack Weldon Husung, ag-
ricultural education, Kili'een; Bob-
by John Jones, business adminis-
t r a fc io n, Stephenville; Eugene
William Klein, agronomy, Bur-
lington; Robert Don McFaddin,
electrical engineerinng, Gordon;
David Lane Mabry, business ad-
ministration, Killeen; Jim Tom
Mills, physical education, Big
Lake; Walter Carl Rains, physi-
cal education, Granbury; Agatha
Wiedebusch, Stephenville.
Religious Centers
Announce Events
A special dedication - program
was in the'Methodist Student Cen-
ter spotlight last night when Don
Neumann, a freshman from Chil-
ton, Texas, was awarded an hon-
orary life, membership in the
Women's Society of. Christian Ser-
vice. The award consists of $15 be-
ing given to the Methodist Mis-
sionary Program. The award is
given in. the name of the late
David Neumann and in honor of
Don Neumann
This special program was under
the direction of Priseilla Morton
and replaced the regular vesper
program.
The topic of discussion this week
at the Methodist Student Center
will be "The Beat Generation and
the Beatnik."
Tuesday: A panel discussion on
the Beatnik-prophet or delinquent.
met- sacks
^ vtlm.
p- -i /
i * 3
"I sure don't like the way those professors are sneaking
good reading into the selection here."
"Courtesy of the College Store"
Ride Through Country
Discloses Old Books
By STAN WEINBURG
Two TSC students on a Sunday
outing around Paluxy and Glen
Rose discovered what could may be
a rare find. A set of books that
date back to the late 1800's and
early 1900's. W. F. Martin of
pecos Texas and Virgina Tem-
pleton of Lorraine, Texas, both
sophomoi'es, were taking" a drive in
the country when they came upon
a rather old and ramshackled
house. The door was missing and
so they decided to give into their
curiosity and explore the interior
of the house. It was empty, except
for a large out-dated Sears Roe-
buck wood stove. Virginia wanted
to remove it from the premises
but Martin said he would have had
to get a moving van. There was
one shelf up on the wall and it was
covered by fragments of news-
papers. Under all the sheets of
paper and inches of dust they
found seven books.
The collection consisted of six
text books and one handwritten
journal. This proved to be the
most interesting of the group. The
journal appears to have been writ-
ten by a doctor or someone who
was very interested in medicine.
The name written on the cover is
J. C. Tuggle, and it is dated 1884
to 1887, Inside the books are many
pages of remedies and recommen-
dations for cuiing various illnes-
ses. Among the. entries in the
journal are lists of patients that
had been treated, and several
TSC Journalists
See Fort Worth
Paper, TV Plants
Journalism students at TSC
toured the Fort Worth Star-Tele-
gram newspaper offices and the
studios of the WBAP radio and
television station Friday after-
noon.
The young journalists saw the
complete operation of newspaper
production. A representative of
the newspaper'^ promotion depart-
ment conducted the tour and an-
swered questions. •
At the television and radio sta-
tion, the students saw television
shows being prepared and were
shown how television .and radio
news is readied for broadcast by
Tom Wheian,' television news an-
nouncer.
Toby Landman, Tarleton sopho-
more, read a news story over a
tape recorder. The same story was
heard later in the day on a news
broadcast.
Students who made the trip
were Landman, Joel Meador, Stan-
ley Weinberg, Pat Cowley, Rus-
sell Burwell, Charles Turner, Andy
Wall, and Sam Russell,
pages of births.
Several of the headings on some
of the pages indicate that Mr.
Tuggle practiced medicine in and-
around Bosque County.
The complaints and some of the
cures listed in the book reminds
one of the illnesses that plague our
modern society, according to the
dramatic television drug commer-
cials. Stuffy nose was not treated
with Dristan, but with rain water
and table salt. Fort that hacking
cough, the doctor had his own
special home remedy. It does ap-
pear as if the pople of yester-year
were bothered by' that old gray
sickness or tired blood, because
there is a reeeipe for a blood puri-
fier among- the many treatments.
There are several treatments in
the journal that are still used to-
day in modern medicine. But in a
few of the notes covering certain
diseases it is evident that very
little was kiiown about them in
the year during which the book
was written.
The greater majority of the pen-
manship used in the journal is of
the old type employed in that
period. The long graceful lines of
the words give the entries the ap-
pearence of being rather artistic.
Some of the drawings in the book
look as if they had been tampered
with since they were originally
placed on the pages.
There was one other artifact in-
cluded in the medical journal
which was not actully part of the
context, but had been slipped in
between the pages. It is a draw-
ing of what looks like the ISth
century's version of Mad Maga-
zine's "What, Me Worry?" boy,
Alfred E. Newman. The name
printed on this picture is "ELI".
The text books that were found
included, "Illustrious Life Of Wil-
liam McKinley 0«r Martyred Pres-
ident," by Murat Halstcd. It was
copyrighted 1901. There are two
medical books with copyrights o£
1907, and two year books from the
Department of Agriculture dated
1903 and 1910. Somehow, two text
books got into the group that are
not quite of the. same vintage as
the others. One is Here Is Henry,
It is an elementry school reader
and it is dated 1948. The other
book is "Through The Looking
Glass and What Alice Found
There" by - Lewis Carroll. This
book is a fairly recent edition
printed in 1946,
No definite decision has been
reached on what will be done with
the books. Martin said he Would be
glad to return, them to their right-
ful owner if ho knew who they
were or if. they claimed them. He
said'that if he kept the books they
would always remind him of the
day Virginia and himself brought
a little history out of hiding.
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The J-TAC (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 20, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 15, 1960, newspaper, March 15, 1960; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth140701/m1/8/: accessed April 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Tarleton State University.