The Rambler (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 01, Ed. 1 Monday, September 13, 1954 Page: 1 of 4
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VOLUME 27.
The Voice of TV/C Students
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FORT WORTH, TEXAS, SEPTEMBER 13, 1954.
NO.
Upperclassmen
Freshmen In
is fen
SITTINGS ON CAMPUS
TXWECO Class Photos
Scheduled for Oct. 4
Classes To Beg in Wednesday:
Social, Church Activities Set
The TWC campus, nearly deserted for the past two
| tion, was filled this
A cover sketch and the artist's
layout are being prepared for the
1035 TXWECO and taking of in-
, dividual photographs far class see-
i tions will begin October 4, Errnilee
| Holdridge, yearbook editor, said
| today.
I" Marvin D. Evans Company will
ganiza tions editor, copyist
other art editors.
"Students with experience
interest in yearbook work are in-
vited to contact me for assign-
ments on the 1955 TV/ECO," the
editor said.
morning w,rh upperciassmen starting i
ginning a pre-registration program of ori
and Enrollment for the 1954-55 session, the si/ty-fcurfh ir. thi
; and freshmen be
, K and Won Ken Park, new arrivals from Korra and fr.-sh-
rnrn at 1 \VG for the fall term, learn about traditional freshman activity, from two sophomores
Suzanne Henderson and Jo Btackwell preview some of the activities awaiting the freshmen a^
the) siiow the newcomers about the campus. un " J
Korean Freshmen Hope to Return
Home With Reconstruction Plans
I history, is expected f
and , las! fall.
Sophomore, junior, senior, and
graduate students began registra-
tion at 8 a. m. today." Freshmen
gathered in the Fellowship Hall of
the Education Bulling to be wel-
comed to TWC by college officials.
Participating in the meeting
were:
Dr Law Sone, president of the
College; Dr. J. Elmer Cox, dean of
„ , ; the College; Mrs. Sarah S. Works.
Freshmen will get a preview dean o{
qual or exceed the nearly 1,000 studer
o? vaca-
• Oration
aficn.
]e'i
p
or
Student Leaders
women; Rev. Lamar
print the TWC yearbook this year. Freshmen Will Hear
; Photography will be done by Sam
Chapman of the Portrait ffailery.
! "Individual photographs will be
' made on the campus this year and
S lt U ho^d that this elimination of activities on the TWC campus at a smith. chaplain;Mr. Douglas Mor-
the inconvenience of going to an freshman organization assembly to ; r;s rjir,-,f.tor 0f religious activities
; off-campus studio will result in* a ■ J® heldat 8:30 a" m' in at TWC and sponsor and counselor
j large representation of students in * eiiowsnip Hall.
the book," Miss Holdridge said, i John Ed Francis, president of
the student body, will welcome S
freshmen and act as master of
ceremonies for a discussion of j
By KITH KEATING
freshmen
Two young freshmen^,on the
campus of TWC are as fresh to the
; ..United States as they are to the
lollege scene. Myung Hi Kang
and Won Kee
Seoul, Korea, have been learning
a great deal about traditional Am-
erican college life on the campus
*{ TWC in the interim between
summer classes and the beginning
of the fall term.
MvuRg, who arrived in the Unit-
ed Stat- by hip August 10, is the
■ A definite schedule of sittings by
I classes will be announced next
j week. It is planned, to schedule
| sittings from 8:30 a. m. to 2:30 p.
Club and went to school In the Kee's enthusiastic comment. 1 sittings from 8:30 a. m. to 2:30 p. carnPu-'> activities by student lead-
daytime. : That Korea will be a united coun- i ni. from Monday through Satur- \ ers'
Won Kee was captured by the try again and soon is the hope of day for a two-week period. Presenting college organizations
Reds in 1950, but he escaped by both the new students, Through- Only two members of the staff ^e-
hiding underground for a time, their professions of medicine and have been chosen. Norma" Sue; To An Girls Club. Peggy. Cara-
Park "both from t^°n going to hia^f ether's home" engineering, both hope to aid their Griffin will be assistant editor and v;a-"' F'ne Arts departmental clubs,
■outside of Seoul. sA<-1Jomb-burst countrv" In its rpoonstriirt^n. wffl do so mo of t.h-» : kar> Cojburn, Art.-,
^A.'-Bomb-burst country' in its reconstruct^}.
near the home destroyed part of the od. After a period 'of training
j house, but no one in the family was necessary for their careers, My-
injured. Won Kee witnessed the ung and Won Kee will return to
landing of Lnited Nations forces at their homeland.
Inchon. "There was so much fire j
j that it was like moonlight over
j the mountains, and the next morn-
ing we sa%v the United Nations'
peyf^Peggy'Martin wffl do some of the i
art work. There are openings for
class editors, including heais for
the graduate and nurses section.
Also needed are a sports editor, or-
ner f
01
i to I
eng:
V ht
Dr, Chang Wook Moon. ; n&g „ hn recalls>
f sociology at TWC. A
' m of Taejon Agricul-
a' newly-firganized
al school, MVnug comes
begin work toward an
degree. Myung's fath-
er Chin Hurling Kang.
me of his collegA^'cjrk
States at Oregon
y. is now the dean
oge at Taejon. ; different from Korea
until he looked out the plane win-
dow and saw the same yellow
earth and the Same blue sky he
knew in Korea.
I Myung and Won Kee, renamed
Myron and Weldon, respectively,
U,
bv new friends on the campus, find ,
that the tall buildings, the numer-
ous automobiles, and the good
broad highways across the country j
are the most striking differences ;
between the two countries. Won
Kee, who flew from Seattle to Dal- .
las, remarked that everything j
Degrees Given 78 Texas Wesieyan
Candidates In Summer Session Exercises
and Science
departmental clubs, Dena Locke:
boys' social clubs, Dick Lord; girls'
social clubs, Norma Sue Griffin;
religious organizations, Harrall
Dun nam; honorary organization?,
Kathlyn P.obinson; veterans' or-
ganization, Eddie Chipman; stu-
dent publications, Ermil^e Hold-
ridge. and stud-»nt organization,
John Ed Francis.
for the freshman class; John Ed
Francis, president of the student
body, and Bill Haley, president of
the sophomore class.
Freshmen tests, beginning at
10:30 a. m., are scheduled jto take
up the rest of the moving and all
Afternoon. These tests are re-
quired of all freshmen and infor-
mation derived from them Is es-
sential to proper registration of
each student. A charge may b'e
made for tests taken at a later
date.
At 5:30 p. m. freshmen and
sophomores will meet at the front
steps of th^ Auditorium Euildln?
for a get-acquainted party.
Freshmen will meet student
leaders in a convocation scheduled
for 8:30 a. m. Tuesday in Fellow-
ship Hall. Following this rnef-tin«
they will continue the testing pro-
gram b«gun Monday.
Division heads of the College
will be presented to freshmen at
another meeting to be held at 1.30
p. nv Tuesday. These division
chairmen are:
Mr. Donald W. Bellah, Division
of Fine Arts.
Dr. E. M. Bowman, Division of
Education.
Dr. Gladys Bowman. Division of
Business Administration.
Dr. Walter R. Click, Division of
Social Selence.
Dr. L. H. Hubbard, Graduate Di-
vision.
Dr. Howard Hughes. Division
of Languages and Literature.
Dr. Theodore Moberg. Division
of Philosophy and Religion.
Dr. V.. E. Ward, Division of Sci-
ence.
registration procedv
trar Jlarrv V/ P.' ^o
start registering af
day.
An all-coll*?*? r>ic
by
■>v ~
,l: ..S*
1 will
' arrived in the United
plane August 20. For-
'ident at C'nosun Univer-
Nns to work toward a
in ; h
: J degree. Won Kee's- American hospitality already has
ind the family of Dr. Moon • impressed the young visitors from
n friends for many years, j the east. At the Dallas Airport,
young men escaped im- j Won Kee was met by an employee
ni by the Red Army in ! of Braniff Airlines, who welcomed
.'•uHng the' seige of Seoul. ; him and took him to a waiting au-
escaped to his father's j tomobile arranged by Dr. Moon to
home near Taejon and re- j bring the new student to Fort
in hiding for three months. J Worth.
t Pu-an, he worked at night j "Such hospitality! And we find
United Nations Officer's I it everywhere we go," was Won
In on« of, TWC's largest summer
commencements, 78 students re-
ceived degrees August 27 at Poly-
technic Methodist Church.
The Honorable Ben IT Guill,
former congressman from Texas
and present executive assistant to
Postmaster General Summerfield
spoke at the commencement hour.
Sincerity and honesty can make
the rewards of holding public of-
fice "more than compensating," he
told the group of graduates.
He also reminded them that
''politics is just as dirty and just as
clean as the electorate deserves,
because politics is purely and sim-
plv the science of the people."
Roy L. Farrow of Dallas, execu-
tive director of the Texas Metho-
dist College Association, received
an honorary doctor of laws degree
from TWC at the ceremony. Mr.
Farrow, who holds'a bachelor's de-
0 /Si —
with the five
ciation for the last
five Appointed to Faculty
Posts in Four Divisions -
F:v new faculty appointments
have r«-n made for the 1954-55
wssion at TWC. .
y are: Dr. Walter E. Gordon,
8«:s(ant professor of biology;
Leonard De Longa, assistant pro-
■ --< r of art; Robert J. McCloud,
'^smnt professor of journalism
c! rector^-of- public relations;
Lou -; Dougherty, instructor in
hue-
administration, and G.
[. adr
nv
: arts''
1 Coi;.o
. .
m
t'-vv Work'v, instructor in business
1 nation and economics.
ordon holds a bachelor of
from Goshen (Indiana)
a master of education from
. and a doctor of philoso-
ducation from Iowa State
> • He has also studied at
?V of Missouri, University
- 1 M"xico, Columbia t'niver-
-ago University and Indi-
' A'ersity.
•" -'v biologj- professop has
Athens (Alabama) Col-
1 ' T'- ihel College as U^jd of
"v ation and teaoher^faTfttng
li, ' and at Huron (South
] College. He has been su-
;! nt of schools at Popejoy,
n i Salem, Iowa, and princi-
■ aughn. New Mexico. Dur-
^•"rld War II he was an in-
r for the Army Air Forces
and at the United
' ' etrie School at Morehead.
Miami and a master'of fine arts j last half of the summer session. Mr.
from the University of Georgia, j McCloud was director of publica-
where he was a graduate assistant j tions for Arkansas Power & Light
jn art j Company, Little Rock. He holds a
In New York he was a member I bachelor's degree in economics and
of the Kottler and P.ampapo gal- ! a master's in education, both from
leries and in 1953 had paintings in | North Texas State College. A
the opening exhibit of the New
York City Center Galleries and the
Allied American Artists Exhibit.
One of his paintings in the 1953-54
travelling exhibit of University of
George graduates was purchased
by the Georgia Museum. 'Mr. De
Longa has had privat(j»study with
Lamar Dodd'of the University of
Georgia; James Johnson Sweeney,
director of the Georgia Museum,
Francis Chapin. professional paint-
er. and Ferdinand Warren, head of
the Agnes Scott College art depart-
ment.
Before joining the staff for the
Pal
%
*rue
at Arrwillo
. 3tn
R.
entucky.
r I"1" Longa has been painting
^•'ssiohally in New Y«*City for
a ' pa»t two years. A native of
^' "sburgh, he has a bachelor of
s degree from the University of
Back-+o-school Dance
To Be Saturday Sock-hop
Art Davis and his orchestra
will play for a back-to-school
dance Saturday, September 1?,
at 8:00 p. m. at the Student Uni-
on Building. The dance will be
a sock hop, and all shoes will be
checked at the door, according
to John Ed Francis, student
council president. All students
are invited, and dates are not re-
quired. The dance is a get-to-
gether party sponsored by
student council.
the
former staff member on newspa-
pers Jn Graham and Denton, he
servwl on the publicity and journ-
lism staff of NTSC for four and
one-half years. He served five
years as an Air Force photograph-
ic officer during World War II.
Mr. Dougherty, a native of Penn-
sylvania, holds a B. A. in economics
and a master of business admin-
istration. both from the University j
of Pennsylvania. He is former
head of the business administration
department at Clifton (Texas) Col-
lege and has been instructor of ac-
counting at Louisiana State Uni-
versify, assistant professor of ac-
| counting and assistant director of
i the bureau of business research at
Universal? of Mississippi, and an
instructor of economics at Temple
University.
Mr. Worley. a native of Malone.
holds bachelor of business adminis-
tration and master of business ad-
ministration degrees, both from
NTSC. He has taught at San Ja-
cinto High in Midland and spent
two years as a civilian instructor
at Sheppard Air Force Base. This
year he was director of training in
the chemical warfare school of the
Army's Forty-ninth Pivisipn. He
has also worked at Convair as a
production planner.
gree from the,. University of Mis-
souri "and a master's degree from
Vandsrbilt University, has worked
ive c^gges in tjie asso-
years.
The graduation ceremony cli-
maxed a series of activities hon-
oring the graduates. At the rob-
irsor ceremonv Auspjst 20, Rev.
James Schuler, an ex-student of
■ TWC and no v.* a student at Ppr-
kins School of Theolosrv at SMU.
challenged the group of graduates
to £riv - ir- T'• than is ri^ko'l of tfi;*ni
in their work, even as they have
received more than just knowl-
edge from their instructors. Re-
ferring to t-he words of the apostle
Peter as He answered the lame
beggar's reouest for monev bv giv-
ing much more than money when
he replied, "Silver and gol$ have I
1 none, but such as I have give I
; unto thee." Rev. Schuler advised
the graduates to give of rtif-ir best
, in whatever field they planned to
| enter.
j At baccalaureate services. Aug-
i ust 22. Dr. Hayden Edwards, pas-
| tor of Polytechnic Methodist
i Church, told graduates, "You are
i not what you think you are. but
! what you think, you are." Using
j the words of Christ from the
j scriptures, "As a man thinketh in
I his heart, so is he," Dr. Edwards
| emphasized the importance of right
thinking in the business of life.
The degrees conferred included
46 bachelor of science, three bach-
Carter Foundation Makes
Scholarship Gift of $.25,000
.^rc.r\ _ ..
iic and srames
d on the Col-
innin? at 5:30
A
hc.\<
The -Amon G. Carter Foundation
has contributed S23,0C>0 to the Col-
lege for a scholarship fund, TWC
President Law Sone has announc-
ed.
The contribution is to be ma'de in
four annual payments of $6,250
each. A check has already been
;>r the school
2d bv
ii-5
,','C
succeeding school ;
"It is hoped that
means of helpin;
youngsters have an
acquire..an
'President -■
the C
by Dr. Soi
fund.
tr/cir t
• h' s
Free Mo\ i
n C. Cart-
Llf
year
will be received
and a
for
similar check
eacn of the
mean
differ
■tic
Clinic Announced
For Club Reporters
Robert J. McCloud, fSfeistant pro-
. lessor of journalism at TWC, will
1 conduct a reporters' clinic at a cail
meeting of the O. O. Mclntyre
Press Club Monday, September 20
, at*l:00 p. m. in the faculty lounge
i of the .Student Union Building.
! All tepotters or departmental
■' clubs and the religious organiza-
j tions are urged to attend. Mr. Mc-
Cloud will give pointers to the new
j reporters on the gathering and the
! preparation of news material for
i The Rambler.
Although the meeting is primar-
| ilv designed to aid the reporters in
I representing their clubs to the
campus at large, all students inter-
ed. "It is impossible
value on the lives of •
men and wemen wh:
an eucation."
Equal gifts were
Texas Christian Un
Worth, and Texas
College, Lubbock.
to
a .-so
versity, ^,rt
T echnolo srical
* Haley Elected Head
Of Methodist Youth
Three officers of the Older Youth
Camp at Glen Rose who were elect-
ed to make up the Council of the
Methodist Youth Fellowship for .
Central TexaS Conference are from |
TWC. Bill Haley, a sophomore, is i
president of the council, Margie i
Thomas, an incoming freshman, is j
secretary, and Vema Caraway, a i
God at 1SOO rla.st
Registration w
day for special e'
day classes.
be held Sat
ning and Sat
elor of arts, one bachelor of music, j ested in %vriting for The Rambler
and 28 master of education are imrited to attend.
junior, is publicity chairman,
j other members of the council , are
. S-.nicr Assembly officers.
SSfll -r
1
fmM:
&
Saturday
An,, all-college informal dance
will be held in the Student Union
Building at S p. m. Saturday. Mus-
ic will b>' furnished by Art Davis
and his band.
Sunday will b- "■* in Th- Chvr h
Day" at all campus churches. The
FS* Methodist Church will h.sv a
special Texas Wesieyan Convoca-
tion for Methodist students.
In. their assembly on Tuesday.
Septp^b^r 21 in th.'51 '"?*ino A**ts
Auditorium, students will observe
the traditional Old Student-New
; which symbolizes
he freshmen with
bod v. Repress nt-
Studertt Weddinj
the unit'in s of t
the old student
in2 the old students will
Ed Francis president of
dent body.
be selected
students.
-■hn
A freshman girl will
to represent the r.e
SUMMER COMMENCEMENT-R cy L. Farrow,
C.-1 »5 left.
executive di^ectc-' ~~e Te^as ^'e*~>
dist Coi:ege Assocatior*. had an honorary doctor of aws degree concerted en him by TWC President
Law Sone, center, at August 28 graduation exercise . Guest speaker was Ben H. Gu:' *igkt. exec.*ive
assistant to the posfmaster genera!, Washington, D. C.
Sone Is Elected
TMCA President
TWC President Law Sor.e was
elected president of the Texas
Methodist College Association in
its annual meeting at Southwest-
em University. Georgetown, July
12.
Dr. Willis Tate, president of
Southern Methodist University,
was elected vce-president, and Mrs.
J. N R. Score, assistant secretary,
was named recording secretary.
P.oy L. Farrow, executive sec-
retary, reported a 10 per cent in-
crease in giving to support of
Methodist colleges in Texas during
the past year.
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The Rambler (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 01, Ed. 1 Monday, September 13, 1954, newspaper, September 13, 1954; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth772012/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas Wesleyan University.