Texas Tech University - La Ventana Yearbook (Lubbock, TX)

 - Class of 1961

Page 5 of 561

 

Texas Tech University - La Ventana Yearbook (Lubbock, TX) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 5 of 561
Page 5 of 561



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Page 5 text:

TYME A letter from the PUBLISHER Phil Orman PHIL ORMAN Director of • Student Publications are just beginning the third volume of the magazine style Texas Tech LA VENTANA. I sincerely hope that you will find it interesting and enjoyable. For the first time in many years, a yearbook has tried to keep pace with the school it serves. With each en- suing volume of the LA VENTANA we have learned something new and tried to use this new knowledge for the betterment of the book and the college. The thanks for this new mode goes to W. E. Garets, head of the journalism department, who made it all possible. Looking through the pages of this yearbook, you will see unfurled be- fore you the things that have hap- pened in the past year. Some of the pages will bring happy memories to mind, some may bring old wounds to light, but all will remind you of Texas Tech in the year 1960-61. makes a campus tick is im- portant to every student and to each of the people 0 1. the LA VENTANA staff. This covers everything from classes to dances, from dorms to clothes, from the Tech Union to sports, from exams to organizations and from the unusual to the com- monplace. I hope that you will take time out from your busy schedule to look at every picture and read every word of copy in this book. Remem- ber when you do, that a few people on this campus have used their valu- able time and effort to produce this for you. They have put blood, sweat, tears, bad grades, dateless nights and gray hair in to what they hope will please you and the people who see this book in the years to come. - - To the staff of the 1960-61 LA VENTANA, let me say that I am proud of you for the work you have done, whether it be a line of copy or a page layout. Without each of you this could not have taken place. Take pride in this book, and know that it is yours whether it be good or bad. Hold your head high and point out what you have done . . . it is quite an accomplishment. Editor-in-Chief . MAX GILLASPY President . . . PHIL ORMAN Editorial Director ELLEN VENABLE Managing Editor JOHNNY WOODY Assistant Managing Editor PAT PORTER Advertising Manager SANDRA ADCOCK Contributing Editors BILL MCGEE, PRESTON MAYNARD MADEMOISELLE EMILY STONE PLAYBOY PAT PARK POST KAY KAGAY DALE BENNETT SPORTS ILLUSTRATED RALPH CARPENTER PHIL ORMAN LIFE BOB TAYLOR FUTURE TRAVIS PETERSON PROGRESSIVE FARMER PERRY THOMPSON SENIOR VIEW CHARLENA CHANDLER JUNIOR VIEW MARJIE SANDERS J. D. WILSON Wonder who ' s got my broom? INDEX Dedication . I Music . 17 Tech Affairs 3 Military 24 Press 4 Art . . 31 Religion .. ... . 11 FRESHMAN VIEW SONDI NELSON KARAN FICKERTT ART DIRECTOR DAVID FAIRRINGTON SOPHOMORE VIEW JOYCE WOODY

Page 6 text:

DEDICATION A BUSY A busy day M. L. Vice president and comptroller By Preston Maynard His Lights Burn Late Chances are if one should walk into the east wing of Texas Tech ' s Administration Building late some night, the lights of one mediately adjacent to the President ' s offices—might still be burning. M. L. Pennington finds much of his work goes more rapidly and surely when he can isolate himself in the late evening hours. An athletically-built ex-University of Texas football player who once coached a basketball team against Polk Robinson in Tech ' s famed Old Barn, Marshall Lee Pennington is the vice president and comptroller of Tech. His work may best be described as that with perhaps the most aches involved of any on the Tech campus. Right Hand Man. He is, in brief, the right-hand-man of the Board of Directors and the President on the operation of one of the largest tions in the Southwest. He is the one person who directs the operation and development of the $40 million plant of Texas Tech and who sees that the biennial budget of $10 million is pended properly. But beyond these things he may perform any of a thousand and one tasks essential to keeping a large versity on even keel. He may advise the Board of tors on a resolution of appreciation to the student body . . . he may lend his help to finding funds to buy red blazers for the Court Jesters, Tech ' s special band for basketball games . . or he may take two hours of a busy day to discuss future plans for the School of Agriculture ' s farm facilities with a Toreador staff member. Yet throughout the masses of details and financial data with which he works, his individual concern for the immunerable, intagible factors which are involved with a large institution remains a focal point of his work. And it is his own personality which enables this to be so. Speaks softly. Pennington is a spoken except when angry — man who often sits down with anyone from Board members to department heads to individual teachers to heads of campus organizations and listens to the problems of the campus nity. Always willing to listen to both sides, yet also ready to take action when he deems it needed, Pennington has the gift of being able to enter a problem clouded by stormy opinions, hear both sides and then chart the various facets involved toward a tion. Those who know him well are impressed by two factors: his love for Texas Tech (he dislikes the word Tech alone, saying there are many Tech ' s, but only one Texas Tech) and the personal touch which he maintains with the various aspects of the college community. 7

Suggestions in the Texas Tech University - La Ventana Yearbook (Lubbock, TX) collection:

Texas Tech University - La Ventana Yearbook (Lubbock, TX) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

1958

Texas Tech University - La Ventana Yearbook (Lubbock, TX) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959

Texas Tech University - La Ventana Yearbook (Lubbock, TX) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

1960

Texas Tech University - La Ventana Yearbook (Lubbock, TX) online collection, 1962 Edition, Page 1

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Texas Tech University - La Ventana Yearbook (Lubbock, TX) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

1963

Texas Tech University - La Ventana Yearbook (Lubbock, TX) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

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