The Ranger (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, March 30, 1979 Page: 3 of 14
fourteen pages : ill. ; page 23 x 16 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
• b
fit
M
i
★
330 San Pedro Ave
224-8563
5O%«
with SAC ID
and this ad before March 29
Pitcher of Beer
OR
Daiquiris
•Strawberry •Peach • Banana
OR
Margaritas
Happy Hour 11-7 p.m.
Pool Room
Bar Drinks 85* Beer 50*
Specializing in frozen fruit daiquiris and margaritas
Unopposed for SRC presidency
Bailey has
Program selects teacher to head committee
CHARLES DAILEY’S LIQUORS
Bring this ad with you and receive a
For Your Favorite Wine
Imported & Domestic
2410 N. Main
4212 San Pedro Ave.
4130 Broadway
Officials to talk on nursing
Two representatives from the University of Texas Health
Science Center School of Nursing will be on campus from
9:30-11:30 a.m. April 11 in Room 301 of Moody Learning
Center.
Bill Leikam, assistant director of guidance and counseling,
said Darlene Turner and Carolyn Gunning will discuss the
requirements for obtaining a bachelor of science degree in
nursing from the UT Health Science Center.
Lecture examines freedom
“The Crisis of Freedom and Confronting the Paradoxes of
Freedom in Our Day” will be the topic of a talk given by a
California psychologist here April 11.
Dr. Rollo May, a past president of the New York State
Psychological Association, will lecture here at 1 p.m. in the
auditorium of McAllister Fine Arts Center. May lectures at
colleges and universities and has written or edited 11 books.
May has taught at Harvard, Yale and Princeton universities,
Brooklyn College and the University of California at Santa
Cruz.
“The No. 1 thing we need is
recognition for SRC. I feel it is the
most important club on campus.”
So far, Senger is running for the
presidency unopposed. Elections
are scheduled for two weeks prior
Senger proposes to unify SRC
and keep it well publicized by
establishing the goals of each
commission early in the semester
so each commission will have a
chance to accomplish those goals.
“I want to have our goals set early
in the semester so that we won’t
start things later in the semester,”
she said.
Senger said she has the support
of Roger Bailey Jr., president of
SRC, in her campaign for office.
“A president should help the
people. The president needs to
make himself available to the SRC
members. The president should be
involved more. Members look up to
the leaders. The commissioners
need to know the president is ready
to help,” Senger said.
Women present workshop
The Center for Women’s Opportunities and this college will
present a Women Business Owners Orientation workshop
April 7 and course April 10-May 29 at the continuing education
center, 1517 N. Main Ave.
The workshop will be from 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m. April 7. The
course is planned from 6:30-9:30 p.m. Tuesdays and
Thursdays. The registration fee for both the course and
workshop is $30 and must be paid through Wednesday.
Students may register by calling the center at 734-7311, Ext.
212.
Army to exhibit media show
The U.S. Army will present a multi-media recruiting
presentation from 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Wednesday in El
Alamo Room of Loftin Student Center.
The show will feature films from Europe, Sgt. Luther Wood
said. “It will be very informative, and I invite all interested
persons to come,” he added.
she said.
The new chairman said she would
like to see more teachers
participate in the program. She said
many teachers are not aware of the
opportunity.
“Too few teachers know about
this program. I hope we can
publicize the program so that more
San Antonio and area teachers will
know of the possibility,” Adkins
said.
JOB OPPORTUNITY
(Part Time and Summer)
We have an opportunity for a student to work part time during the school year and
full time during the summer. Some flexibility in schedule can be arranged. Must be
a local resident or willing to remain in the San Antonio area for full time stable summer
employment. Prefer student in earlier college years that can work at least two summers.
Position in our local service center repairing our line of power tools. Therefore, me-
chanical aptitude and ability to repair is essential.
Provides opportunity to develop a career with Black & Decker. Prefer business oriented
students. Very good level of pay.
Call 732-1221 For Appointment,
the
Black & Decker (U.S.) Inc.
__________________________AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M/F
10% Discount
Large Selection*Ad Good On All Wines
(Except On Specials In Any Other Newspaper.)
“Roger Bailey has been a very
good leader. He’s fair and equal.
He’s an extremely fair person, he’s
helped everyone. He has given me
a lot of good advice.”
Senger admits she and Bailey do
have some differences in policy.
Senger believes a president should
be more involved with the
If elected president of the
Student Representative Commis-
sions, her main goal would be to
keep SRC in the spotlight, Linda
Senger said Tuesday.
Senger, a freshman public
relations major and member of the
public relations commission, said
more publicity is needed for SRC.
“The main thing I want to do is
make SRC recognized by students
because we are representing almost
22,000 students. We are the ear of
students. We listen to what they
say and try to solve their pro-
blems,” Senger said.
Science club to visit coast
Earth Sciences Club members will go on a field trip to Padre
Island April 7. Departure time has not been set. Members will
search for rocks and fossils along the beach.
A field trip to the Central Mineral Region between
Fredericksburg and Llano is tentatively set for April 14.
“Students will look for granite, topaz, amethyst and also
search for garnet in stream gravel there,” Thomas Culbertson,
sponsor of the club, said.
The next club meeting will be at 1:45 p.m. Tuesday in Room
104 of the chemistry-geology building.
_Klms ____________
Group chooses officers
Newly elected officers of the Cheshire Cheese Club are
Juanita Calvin, president; Nicki Connolly, vice president;
Doris Schleaker, secretary and Jan Workman, treasurer.
According to its constitution, the purpose of the club is to
“reward excellence in scholarship, to foster social
development and to inspire creativity in the social sciences
and the humanities.”
The club is soliciting members. Prospective members
should be full-time students who maintain a minimum B grade
average. Students should call John Vanderzee at 675-2059 to
join.
to the end of the spring semester.
Senger also said SRC needed
more input from the student body.
“I want to get more information
than we’ve been getting. We have
suggestion boxes. We only get two
or three suggestions at the most
per week, but the ones we do get
are very helpful.”
Another point Senger stressed
would need improvement next year
is SRC’s unity. Some members
resign because they find the SRC is
not as active as they had thought,
she said.
“We need to create more unity
among our members. It kills me to
see our members resign. One of the
main reasons is that SRC is not as
active as it could be. The key is that
we need the student body’s help.
We can’t do it all alone. We need to
know what they need and learn
what they feel,” Senger said.
Foundation offers stipends
The Brackenridge Foundation will award merit scholarships
to two students transferring from here and St. Philip’s College
to St. Mary’s University.
The scholarships will cover tuition and fees for an academic
year plus a stipend of up to $500 a year.
Students must be accepted by St. Mary’s University no later
than Sunday to be eligible. All work at the community college
level must be finished by the spring semester with no less than
58 transferable hours. A 3.2 cumulative grade-point average is
required.
Applications are available in the career library of the
counseling center in Room 208 of Fletcher Administration
Center.
/ejui
personal qualities, the committee
either approves or disapproves an
application.
Pearce became a member of the
committee in December 1963 and
became chairman in the fall of 1968.
She said her work with Adkins in
Delta Kappa Gamma, honorary
education society, was influential
in her choice of Adkins.
The assistant dean described
Adkins as a leader with sound
judgment.
Adkins said the most important
responsibility of the committee is
selecting individuals who will be
good representatives of the United
States.
“We must realize we are sending
people who will live in a different
culture. The people in that country
will see these program participants
as typical Americans.
“To me, the single most
important thing is that the
participants will represent us the
way we want to be represented,”
An English professor here has
been appointed chairman of the
regional interview committee of the
Fulbright Exchange Program. The
professor, Sue Adkins, was
appointed to succeed Dr. Bessie
Pearce, assistant dean and former
chairman, upon Pearce’s resigna-
tion.
Pearce will retire from the college
July 27.
The Fulbright Exchange Program
is a result of the Fulbright-Hays
Act, a tax-funded program provi-
ding opportunties for teachers in
the United States to attend
seminars and teach in countries
such as Italy, Belgium and
Pakistan.
The program allows teachers an
opportunity to gain travel ex-
perience and exposure to other
cultures and teaching methods.
Pearce said the purpose of the
regional interview committee is to
screen applicants for this program.
Through a series of questions
which evaluate the individual on
Candidate stresses publicity
commissioners than
been.
“Roger will preside but won’t
help the commissioners. He shows
up at all the commission meetings,
but doesn’t attend the other
meetings. He did not go to the
Leadership Retreat, the regional
convention or the Christmas party.
“Being on the commission this
year gave me the chance to evaluate
it as a whole and gave me the
experience to feel capable of
running,” she said.
Other members of the regional
interview committee are Everett L.
Turbon, director of counseling at
St. Philip’s College; Frances
Nesbit, of Irving Adult Home-
making Center of San Antonio
Independent School District;
Ignacio L. Orozco Jr., Irene
McCrystal and Alex Bernal, English
professors here; and Mrs. O.O.
Martin, retired supervisor of
homemaking centers for the city.
•T
VM-A
k (
/ I
COLLEGE IMPRINT (please print)
SIZE (Specify S. M. L, XL)
QUANTITY
I
I
I
1
I?
u
SCHUTZ
MALT LIQUOR.
! DON'T SAY BEER,
SAY BULL!
I
I
}Schlitz Malt Liquor “SAY BULL” College Name Athletic Jersey(s) j
I
I
I
I
I
check or money order payable to "SAY BULL” Jersey Offer. I
_______________________________________________________________________ I
J
J
>4
a
■
i
I
* W I
/'( I
&lTz\
/ mi \
WIDR. ’
r W
gSl
l MAILTOzSAY BULL" JERSEY OFFER
I P.O.BOX 9197.ST.PAUL.MINNESOTA 55191
Please send^uant ^vxv....v-„ o
@ $5.50 each, including College Name Personalization, postage and handling.
■ Sizes available:
| S small (34-36) M medium (38-40) L large (42-44) XL extra-large (46)________
I
I
I
I
| Enclosed is $.
| Name______
I Address____
| C i ty____________________________________S ta te__________________________Z i p___________
| Offer void where prohibited by law. Allow 4 to 6 weeks for shipment. Offer expires May 31. 1979.
GET THIS UNIQUE “SAY BULL” ATHLETIC SHIRT CUSTOM-PRINTED
WITH THE NAME OF YOUR SCHOOL FOR ONLY $5.50.
Bull your way through college in style! With a genuine Schlitz Malt Liquor bull shirt.
Featuring our Schlitz Malt Liquor bull with royal blue 3/4 length sleeves and white shirt body.
It’s made of 70% cotton and 30% polyester. And it’s 100% you, because we custom-print
the name of your school right on the front.
It’s the shirt you’ll wear proudly all year long. For jogging, class, team sports and
getting together with friends for a round of Schlitz Malt Liquor. After all, if you’re
going to “SAY BULL” across your chest, you might as well start backing it up.
f......-
14
h
I
ft?
*
Pl
i
TH
■
rjF
st y
o
pi
-A X
SAY BULL!
TO YOUR STUDENT BODY.
Cj
y I
’My
lx
T ‘ Y..............zx
. .......... .A ’Rju • g
""Oil
f- C' I
—-
..Z
A"
b
I 1
1
FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1979 ■ THE RANGER 3A
■
>■ ■* . * c
*
2
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
San Antonio College. The Ranger (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, March 30, 1979, newspaper, March 30, 1979; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1350463/m1/3/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting San Antonio College.