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Page 13 text:
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Arkansas City lunior College s . -33. 1 ,.-I! mi, L. l arf, '- 4 f'-A ,fy V A -1-:A-11 ' , gf A f if N 1l :' A T ,-ig... '---i X S 4,7 2 5 I VOL. Xvn it ARKANSAS CITY, KANSAS f THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1960 , ' ,No. 2 Witches Prowl October lt5 at ' Carnival The lllvitches will prowl and the cats will howl' as the Student Education Association presents its fall Witch Carnival, October 15, in the college clubroom and auditorium. College and high st:-heol studentsare invited to attendlf '1 . Sponsored as a money-making pro- ject tln replenish the association's scholarship fund, the show will in- clude ffortune tellers, a jail for de- linquent -collerghians, a marriage bureau complete with a fake justice of the flpeace and certificates of matri- monyplballoons, and such other fancies as the fertile minds of members can concoct., ' - . V M A - A nightclub atmosphere will prevail in the college auditorium, as menibers present a dance complete with floor show and cover charge. Members of the association are, practicing student talent acts in preparation for the entertainment of their guests. Nancy Hglrleg is chairman of the overall committee. Gary Barton is in change of the booths, Katie Coyne of tickets, ,lim Chisham of decorations, and Sue Y-Sanders and Jo Ann White of publicity. .iii-O .ii Welch's Represent College Larry VVelch, student council pres- ident, and his wife, Connie, repre- sented Arkansas City Saturday at the fall meeting of, the Kansas Public Junior College Student Council Asso- ciation' at Hutchinson. The organization, created last spring, hopes to promote the interests of junior colleges and junior college students. A constitution was formally adopted at the meeting last week. 1.q .1o... . Tiger May Not Be Published Because of general lack of interest, there is some possibility there will be no annual this year, A. E. Maag, sponsornsaid Tuesday. In case there is no Tiger, there may be a general picture supplement of the Tiger Tales that, .includes the Sophomore class pictures. ,D Ark City's Cheerleaders To Sport New Uniforms Ark City's cheerleaders will soon be sporting fancy new uniforms. The girls have picked white as their basic color this year, and will wear white wool skirts and a white corduroy long- sleeved pull-overs. ' . A The pull-over will carry the tradi- tional tiger head on the back and the large letter A on the front. The two second-year cheerleaders will wear two orange arm bands and the three first-year cheerleaders will wear one arm band each. The uniformsewill be completed by black corded shoes and white bermuda socks. , - ---o1- Allison, Mullett ,j Stensaas,Webster, White in Top Five Preparations for Arkansas City's annual Halloween festival moved up a pace Monday as the names of five top candidates for the crown of Queen Alalah XXIX were revealed by Dean K.,,R..Galle, chairman of the selection board, Candidates are Kay Allison, Alice Mullett, Janet Stensaas, Glenda Web- ster, and JoAnn White. The five sur- vived the second hurdle in the selec- tion process. Although the queen has actually been selected. neither she nor the general public will know who she is until the cornation ceremony Oct- ober 28, in the auditorium-gymnasium. Theme for the coronation program will be Ninety .Years of Progress. Dr. J. J. Vineyard, superintendent, is general chairman of the coronation committee, since this element of the festival is the task of the public schools, Beside 'Dean Galle, three other college faculty members are deeply involved. Kenneth Judd, vocal music inctruc- tor, will coordinate the entire coron- ation program and conduct a, chorus madefup of junior college 'and senior high students. Mrs. Fostine Moncrief is in charge of the coronation se- quence in' the program. August Troll- ,man .will -conduct the coronation orchestra, as weli as his bands inf-the parade W, Saturday. , 3 Ul..'i' - College Qualifies g.l:orNational A j Defense Loans A Arkansas 'City Junior College' has qualifiedifor loans to' students under iijhe Nat1onaldDefense Student Loan rogram an a ,total of S1700 is available, for such loans, Dean K. R. Galle has revealed. The specific purpose of the student loan program, established -under 'llxiicle til oi the National Defense J uca ion ct O 1958, is to stimu- late and assist' in .the establishment ?t iaistigutions if higher education of un s -or ma ing of low-interest loans to students in need thereof to purkstiettheir, courses of study at such IHS 1 u IOHS., While making the loans available to needy studentsuln all fields of study in participating institutions, the act gpeilflets that in tlae selection of stu- en s .O receive oans special con- sideration shall be given to students with superior academic backgrounds who desire to teach ln' elementary or secondaryuschools, and students whose academictbackgrounds indicate superior capaci y or preparation in scieince, imathematics, engineering, or mo ern oreivn anguage. . To quallfjii for such a loan, Dean Galle points out, an individual, as a rule, should have. achieved an average lgralde oi Bl duringlifhisl last year in lg sc oo or is ast previous semester in college. Under the act, thedinitigclution rnust investigate the nee O e app icant and determine the actual lamount nei1e,ssary'for him o pursue is pro0'ram.' f Only full-tHmeDsZl:udents are eligible or fa iona efense loans. The individual borrower is required to subscribe. to a loyalty oath affirming alligignce to tthle United States. n eres oes no egin to accrue until one year after the borrower ceases to be a full-time student, but then becomes 3 per cent per year. . A. Bufo, director of Vocational etducaltion guild ciolligefpriiiting in- s ruc or, a en e e our-state in- dustrial ,arts ,conference at Pittsburg, 'Friday and ' Saturday. A W
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Page 12 text:
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rnunsiyijr, siggn-:Mana 2921060 ACJC TIGER TALES - igge 6, Tigers Journey To Tonkawa For Friday Test The Tonkawa Mavericks, supported by a homecoming crowd, will furnish the opposition to an eager crew of Tigers, on the Oklahoma gridiron, Friday, at 2:30, and the Bengals will return home to prepare to repel on El Dorado Grizzly invasion, October 7. Coach Ben Cleveland thinks the Maverick tilt will be a game that will separate the men from the boys. Cleveland says he was using the game last week with the Tulsa freshman to see what boys he wanted in certain positions for the Tonkawa game. He will use the Tonkawa game to get ready for the six conference games coming up. The Mavericks have a fine passer, and run mostly off the single wing formation. Coach Cleveland stated that his team has never tried to de- fend a single wing attack before. El Dorado had tied Parsons 13 to13, won from Fort Scott 21 to 6, and lost to Dodge City 13 to 12. The Grizzlies have an able passer and runner as their starting quarterback, and Cleveland believes the game will he a major test for his Arks. -,-gil Bengals' Early Lead is Topped by Tulsans Sweeping from kick-off to the goal- line, the Tigers got off to a roaring start September 24 against the Tulsa Hurricane freshman, but were over- whelmed by two Tulsa scores in the third and fourth quarters, and lost 12 to 7. The Bengals scored early in the first quarter with a pass completion from LeRoy Call to Clayton Bain for their only TD. Brown gained the extra point with his fine footwork. In the third quarter the Hurricanes took the kick-off and marched for the score. Because of the Tigers fine de- fense, Tulsa failed to make the extra point, and the locals held a 7 to 6 lead. The Tigers were holding their own until the fourth quarter, when the Hurricanes intercepted a pass and drove to near the Ark 10-yard line, and scored soon after. In the last moments of the game a Tiger drive bogged down when the line leaked on a play which could have scored. and Call was caught far behind the line of scrimmage near the 25- yard line. 9 Lettermen Return For Gridiron Season Nine lettermen reported to Coach Ben Cleveland as a 1960 football squad of -10 men settled down to work for the conference season. They are Tom Gibson, Pat Stark, Allen Lock- ard, and Bill Hollins, Ark Cityg Don Ward, Stroud, Okla.g Boyze Edwards, Wewoka, Okla.g and George Eads, Salina. First-year men and sophomores who did not letter last year include Paul VVebber and Kenneth Gulley, Bartlesvilleg Larry Wolfe, Shawneeg Bob Waddell and Clayton Bain, Ponca Cityg LeRoy Call, Copan, Okla.g Den- nis James, Phil Mathews, and Bill James, Chiloccog Lloyd Jackson, Sa- lina: John Torrez and Bob Gay, Topeka: Joe Rutter, Udall, Francis Loftin, Sedan, Larry Iverson, Mul- vaneg Loren Knapp, Gridleyg Bob Holman. South Havcng Ronnie Calvin. Melburn Brown, and Larry Brown, Winfieldg Bruce Cable, Cedar Valeg Jim Baker, Clearwaterg Don Jones, Wichitag John Whaley, Wellingtong Carl Hunter, Camdenton, Missouri: Gene Burr, Roger Todd, Ronald Schuchman, Arnie Louthan, and Jerry Hagan, Ark City. . -.O..ii.T. Cards Are Victims OF Bengals, I5-6 In Season Cpener By playing tough defensive football September 9, the Tigers defeated the Parson's Cardinals at Parsons, to win their official opening game of the season, The score was 15 to 6. Although both teams came out strong in the first half neither was able to score. -Coach Ben Cleveland's two platoon system finally weakened the Parson 60-minute men, and in the third quarter the Tiger defensive unit caught the Cardinals in their own end-zone to score a 2-point safety. But Parsons wasn't defeated yet. The Cards rallied late in the third quarter and scored the first touch- down of the game. The Tigers, deter- mined not to be beaten, started a touchdown drive early in the fourth quarter .Tiger quarterback LeRoy Call started a sweep play to the left, only to encounter a solid wall of Cardinal linemen, so he reversed his field and sprinted a fantastic 45 yards for the Tigers' first touchdown of the game. Just a few minutes later, Tiger inside linebacker Don Ward made an incredible interception, and ran 50 yards for the second and last touch- down, Bengals Stopped By Busters, I3-7 On Western Field In a game stopped temporarily by driving rain and an electrical storm, Garden City's Bronco Busters de- feated the Tigers 13 to 7, at Garden City, September 17, and dropped the Bengals to a .500 status in league play. In the first half both teams played very .good defense, but neither team could get farther than their oppo- nents' 20-yeard line. Larry Brown got the Tigers rolling in the third quarter with his run around right end. After ten plays Brown handed off to Hollins, who plunged off tackle to cross the goal line. Hollins succeeded in kicking the extra point. The fourth quarter was a rough and rugged one. After 'six plays James Brown broke loose around the Tigers' right end for a T.D. Buster John Gracek put his best foot to Evork in succeeding on the conversion root. The Tigers received the kickoff and returned the ball to their 38-yard line. There they were forced to punt after 3 downs. The Busters took over on their 36-yard line, and ran 13 plays to get across the goal line. Ten seconds before the gun was sounded, Quarterback Gracek went into scoring territory on a quarterback plunge. The Busters failed in the extra point attempt. Time ran out as the Tigers re- ceived, and returned the ball to the Busters 28-yard line. ...,li0 ,i. Tigers Down Alumni. 13-12 The educated toe of Bill Hollins produced a point after touchdown to provide a one-point lead, and allow the Tigers to chalk up their first victory of the 1960 grid season and defeat their Alumni, 13 to 12, Sept. 3. It was the annual contest sponsored by the Quarterback Club, to raise funds for scholarships. John Whaley scampered 30 yards to open the Dave Dunbar, T.D. for the in the first quarter scoring for the Tigers. '59, followed with a Alumni, also in the first quarter. A quarterback sneak by '60, put the Alumni 12 to 6, until Clayton Gary Lowrie, out in front, Bain set up a T.D. for Carl Hunter. Hollins put the plug in the jug when he succeeded in kicking the extra point. . .iTO-,.T. Student activity tickets were issued, starting September 14, to students who had their fees paid. The activity tickets admit students to both high school and junior college games.
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Page 14 text:
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Page 2 - ACJC TIQFIR TALES THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1960 TIGER TALES The official student publication of the Arkansas City Junior College, Arkansas City, Kansas. Issued fort- nightly during the academic year ex- cept for holiday periods. and dedicated to the welfare of the student body it represents. NEWS STAFF hdiloy ,-,,,,- d,,., C arolyn Storey News Editor . . .... Jock lValkinshaw Reporters Charles Kihega, Carroll Pattrick, Norman Wolford PRODUCTION STAFF Production Manager -- Ray Langdale Make-Up Foreman -- Ron Schuchman Linotype Foreman . ..... Davld Rllcll Press Foreman ....... John Rogers Linotype Operators --.. Ruch, Carl Whitford, Rogers, Schuchman Pep Assembly Brings Rousing Music from Bengal Bandsmen College band made its first appear- ance of the year in a rousing' musical call to a pep assembly, September 21, at the college auditorium. Members of the band include Nancy Hale, Rose Mary Hail, Kathleen Isa- bel Moore, Sue Sanders, Judy Kent, Mary Todd, Elaine Lord, Janice Keown, Jim Haskins, Richard Gatton, Raymond Ramon, Mike Dial, Henry Ivanoff, Ron Porter, Wayne Amme1'- man, Jo Ann White, Janet Stensaas, Arnie Louthan, Marvin VVening'cr, and Glenda VVcbster. More musicians are needed, and additions will be welcomed, Director August Trollman said last week. Trollman is particularly anxious to pick up a bass horn player before the organization dons its gay orange and black uniforms for the fall parades. . 1-.ioli-1 College Librarian Calls Attention to Rules Mrs. Dorothy Johnson, college librarian, has called attention to library rules, which students must observe if the library is to function efficiently. They are as follows: The library is open Monday through Friday from 7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and it is open at noon hours. The library is not open during assemblies or lyceum programs. Reserve books can be checked out overnight at 3:00 p.m. and must be returned by 8:00 a.m. the next school LITTLE MANfONlCAMPUS -,,...-1-- Hggk TEGYS Wtu- ' ll GOOD fi 'U9 QUTTGGQ To HAVE Til ED FM LED 1 Q- ea aerrcrzrcfw 1 1 g Ziff +5fF'.1':i3ioK e'fAz. is COLLASE L I '.l GN 22,g 'QQZ.,12--Qef KNOW waesze' A-f mfgrgg W You Aze HEADER . azorr-V . 1 Q ' . J -: 7 - l I ca! ,.- . 50 .3112 4 I ' f moz TE6T6 snow You -ro we A Keen amazes? HM My l is euioev M1-66ll.ES. , -Q I9 Junior College Graduates 4 Teaching in Arlca Richard Cox, industrial arts and printing instructor in the junior high and high school, and VValter Mathias- meier, social science instructor and coach in the high school, head the list of recent arrivals from Ark City Jun- ior Colleg'e's graduation list to teach day, A fine of 106' per hour, or any fraction of an hour, must be paid on all late reserve books. Regular library books may be checked out for two weeks, and re- newed for two weeks. A fine of 2c per day, Saturday and Sundays in- cluded, will be charged for late books. Back issues of magazines may be checked out in the same manner as library books. Current issues may be checked out only by special arrangement with the librarian. nsas City Schools in the Ark City school system. Mr. Cox previously taught at Wood River, lllinois, and worked on a daily news- paper in Pryor. Okla, Mr. Mathias- meier had taught at Fredonia, Kan. for the last six years. Seventeen other grads teaching in Ark City are Reece Bohannon, junior college and high scboolg Mrs. Martie Crowley. Frances Willard: Kenneth Judd, junior college and high school: Mrs. Terry Eaton, junior high, Mrs. Estelle Gottlob, high school: J. C. Louderback, junior high and high school basketball coach: Miss Reta Bowen, Rooseveltg Miss Lucille Wright, Pershingg Miss Elsie Allard., Lincoln: Mrs. Jeri Frambers, Jeffer- song Miss Gladys Townsley, Adamsg W. J, Copeland, Jefferson: Mrs. Eliz- abeth Cook, Willard, Clara Bell, Jeff- ersong Lois Snyder, Jedersong Mrs. Geraldine Musson, junior high: and Mrs. Caroline Applegate, high school. F, X i. ll fl I .Rl in li l I I I 1 I 'x l gr All-I
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