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Page 22 text:
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Tower of Babel Parlez-vous francais? Como esta usted? Sprechen sie Deutsch? Watch your dangling modifiers! These phrases are often heard in the Department of Languages. lt is an area of study that is both inter- esting and challenging. Perhaps part of the challenge stems from the fact that this de- partment has more instructors with doctoral degrees than any other at Lee. Under the direction of Dr. Robert Humbertson the department offers majors in English, French, and Spanish, and is adding a new communication major. The English curriculum is de- signed to prepare students for teaching English in secondary schools, for graduate work in En- glish, or for professional fields. The foreign language curriculum is de- signed to prepare students to be- come secondary-school teachers, to do graduate work in a foreign lan- guage, and to be equipped with language skills vital to mission work or cross-cultural vocations. In previous years, the English program was primarily concerned with literature. Recently it has ex- panded, adding such courses as non-fiction and creative writing, to give more emphasis on this impor- tant aspect of the discipline. It is also working more closely with the student publications, OMNIBUS and VINDAGUA. 3357 Y 5 fix' Q Above: Members of the Forensic Club participate periodically in debates and speech competition. Left: The faculty of the Department of Languages consists of tseated, left to rightl Mrs. Ellen French, Mrs. lanet Rahamut, Dr. Carolyn Dirksen, tstanding, left to righti Dr. Robert Humbertson tchairmanl, Dr. Sabord VVoods, Dr. Eleanor Barrick, Dr. Raymond Barrick, and Mrs. Ruth Lindsey. 18 Hcodemics
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Page 21 text:
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,f ,,,, 01 1130 ,sm Above: Phi Beta Lambda fFuture Business Leadersl is an active business organization on campus and throughout the state. Left: The typing dass keeps busy, Below: Pam Haywood at work in the faculty seCretary's office. 1 .4
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Page 23 text:
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Department Flwcird Susan Pope received the award of the Department of Languages with a major in English. Active on student publications, Susan served as section editor on the VINDAGUA for two years and as a copywriter for the OMNIBUS. She also participated in the Campus Choir, was student representative to the Nina Driggers Philological Association and served as vice-president of Alpha Chi Honor Society. Lee on the Flir A unique program sponsored by the Language Department is the weekly radio broadcast. Every Saturday, Life at Lee goes on the air at 11:15 a.m. and presents a fifteen-minute program of news and announcements from the campus. A public affairs presentation of WCLE, the broadcast employs the talents of students at Lee, especially those who have expressed an interest by enrolling in related classes, such as Radio and Speech, and Voice and Diction. Now in its second year, much of the program is coordinated by Bob Lubell, an experienced radio announcer and communication major at Lee, along with Dr. Robert Humbertson, head of the Department of Languages. Other students participating in the broadcast include Mary Io Knizer, Cliff Morehead, and Karen Renfro, who have learned to operate the control board at the station. Exclusively a Lee College broadcast, the weekly program features interviews with students and faculty, and music by groups and individuals associated with the school. Each week, the program closes with a quote from The Pointed Pen by President Charles W. Conn. X Longuoges Above: Recipient of the Department Award this year was Susan Pope Left Elizabeth Graves tutors Rolando Cuellar
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