The Rambler (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 10, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 4, 1962 Page: 4 of 6
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Page Four .
THE RAMBLER
Tuesday. December 962
if
Knees Help Decide Buckman's Future;
Medicine Gets the Nod Over Coaching
CONSOLING his Ju nior football team is "Coach" David Buck-
man as the Juniors fali victim to an All-Star powerhouse.
David, belcfrjoor of the final game because of a leg injur/,
is this year's Student Association President,
if
Alpha Psi Presents Annual Xmas.Play
A Christmas play, "No Room in
the Hotel," was presented by Al-
pha Psi Omega jn last Tuesday's
assembly.
A modern, humorous, Christmas
play by £)orothy Wilson, "No Room
in the Hotel," shows how a hard-
boiled newspaper reporter is the
only one of a diversified gather-
ing; in a small hotel whose charact-
er is changed by the appearance of
a poor couple strikingly similar
to another pair who were refused
admittance to an inn many cen-
turies ago. •
Cast members of the play were:
a Man, Silas Hughes; a Woman,
Sharon Little; a TSerk, Linda Grif-
fin; Reporter, Lewis Marchbanks;
a Traveling Man. Dick Hoag; Scrub
Woman, Sandra Ford; Bellboy,
Tommy Kearley; Poetess, Jo Lu
Moore: Senator, Bob Price; and
the Senator's Wife, Linda Boon
Whitley.
"No Room in the Hotel" will
again be presented today at the
First Methodist Church and for
the University Place Book Club
on Dec. l'i.
a
by Rosanne Harvey
Rambler Staff Writer
If a president can play touch
fooCKill, why can't a doctor wear
a baseball glove? .. •
Don't be too surprised if David
Buckman, Student Association
president, does wear a baseball
glove and carry a football, too,
when he completes his study of
medicine.
The senior pre-med student, a
hometown boy making good, finds
tihie to. fulfill his presidential du-
ties -as., well as participate in all
intramural sports. His previous
years at TWC have been equai^,
packed'with activity. He served as
Freshman C 1 a s s vice-president,
sophomore intramural captain and
Sakkara vice-president. A person-
ality us well as a politician, he was
Freshman Class favorite, Sopho-
iass favorite nominee and
this fall - was4, chosen for Who's
Who in American Colleges and
Universities.
Planning to enter Southwestern
Medical School, David is interested
in specializing in orthopedics. An
encouraging high school teacher
first nudged him toward the field
of medicine and his interest in bio-
logy and chemistry has kept him'
going. •
Against socialized medicine, Dav-
id feels that a doctor must put too
much time in education and train-
ing to be promised no more than
a minimal salary.
The National Student Body
President's Convention in Ohio
State University last summer cut
out some of David's usual baseball
and fishing. At the convention, he
met and exchanged ideas with stu-
dent leaders from all parts of the
country. This exchange of idfcas
contributed to the proposed TISA
project of establishing a Political
and Cultural Life Council.
A long-time baseball fan and
player, David can usually find a
team to take him in during the
summer. When he's not on the dia-
mond, he's often up to his knees'
in some Colorado trout stream. A
Boy Scout at heart, he still pre-
fers camping out to more civilized
vacationing.
An interest in being a profes-
sional athlete once ran his inter-
est in medicine a close race. How-
ever, a pair of uncooperative
knees thwarted that ambition, and
David was reduced to a some-
times athlete and coach; In answer-
ing why he chose medicine over
coaching, he frankly admitted that
he hoped to make a little more
MODKRN, CLASSICS SCUL -TURhb <*> 18 RA| OOUO.
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Ace
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&
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on
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CHEERING the Rams on in the
recent Howard Payne game
is Sakkara's "Willie the Ram."
money in medicine.
And a boy who professes a de-
sire for a blue Bonneville conver-
tible needs to make money,
Profs Talk Texas
At 'Society' Meet
Dr. John it. Stephens, associate
professor of social science, and Dr.
Joe E. Mitchell, associate professor
of education, were guest panelists
last Tuesday evening at a meeting
of the Tarrant -Goupty Historical
Association. Dr. Wallace Graves,
TWG's dean of men, was panel
moderator.
The Association is sponsoring a
.series of .programs on Texas His-
tory featuring speakers from Fort
Worth area colleges. •'
Dr. Stephens and Dr. Mitchell
presented TWC's program, which
covered the era of Texas history
from 1821 to 1845.
Slavery as it affected certain
problems of Texas was Dr. Steph-
ens' topic.
Dr. Mitchell discussed the early
educational activity in Texas.
Speakens-from Arlington State
College presented the first pro-
gram of the series, covering the
Colonial period up to 1821.
TCU will present the third and
final program of the,,series at the
next regular meeting of the As-
sociation with a discussion of Tex-
as history after 1845.
GRAVES
Wonderful Food
Try Us for Sunday
Evening Meals
Catering to TWC
Plenty of Parking
ED 2-0862
CAFE
Rosedale & 8th Avenue
Ft. Worth, Texas
SAXON SHOP
Seminary South
is fashion headquarters for0
style-conscious young men
on the way up . . .
MALL LEVEL, Seminary South
TRADITIONAL FASHIONS ALSO
First Floor Downtown
I*
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Wood, Mike. The Rambler (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 10, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 4, 1962, newspaper, December 4, 1962; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth337010/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas Wesleyan University.