The Howard Payne College Yellow Jacket (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, April 10, 1970 Page: 1 of 4
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The j$owari Payne
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Volume 57
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Brownwood, Texas, April 10, 1970
Number 24
DIA Week Closes
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Two concerts Friday by the
U. S. Navy Band are scheduled
to wind up the l&th annual
Democracy - In - Action Week
•events for most Howard Payne
students, but the action is
just beginning for 100 Texas
high schoolers who will take
part in a special seminar con-
tinuing Friday and Saturday,
James Williamson, DIA stu-
dent chairman, announced.
•. •/■ ;t;. .. ' •
The Navy Band per-
form at the Browkwood Coli-
seum at 3:15 and 8 p!m. Fri-
•day, and tickets aye free to
students who pick them up in
advance at the Academy, Wil-
liamson said.
The High School Seminar is
scheduled to begin Friday at
2 p.m. and continue until a
luncheon at' Richardson Hall's
Cold Room with Sen. Ralph
Yarborough as speaker ends
the weekend program.
featured this week in ad-
dresses to the students were
Porter Randall, Texas State
.Network newsman; William
Hallman, political officer in
the office of Iranian affairs at
the Department of Stated Bu-
reau of Near Eastern and
South Asian Affairs; Skipper
Yee, a. Stockton, Calif., busi-
nessman; . his wife Mrs; Lois
Yee; and Dr. Herbert Howard,
pastor, Park Cities Baptist
Church, Dallas. '
The DIA program, which
was inspired by Dr. Guy JJfew-
man, president of k HoHyard
Payne, is centered about: the
history, the heritage, and the
now of America: totalitarian
systems in opposition to the
American way are also studi-
ed, Williamson said. •
It :'f ';e« t u r e s semi-annual
seminars for high school stu-
dents, .monthly forums for
HP students, and the annual
spring DIA week.
An outgrowth of the Doug-
las MacArthur Academy of
Freedom, the program has
brought to Howard Payne out-
standing speakers from inter-
national life to speak on sub<-
jects of government, educa-
tion, 'economics, history, law
enforcement, international re?
lations, morality, commu*4ca-„,
tions- and the Chr
ligion.
Mrs. Dorothy Jean Schroed-
er is the; facuity chairman and
co-ordmator of Defnocracy-In-
Action.
SPEAKS—As keynote speaker for MA Week, Porter Randall
addressed Monday's ehapel on the changes that hstve taken place within the USSR
duriiig recent years. Randallis a Texas State Network newsman who gives radio
broadcasts three times daily from Fort Worth.
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Coffee To Honor Ralph
Senator Ralph W. Yarbo-
rough, D-Texas, is to " be the
honored guest at a public
coffee and reception at 3
p.m., Saturday at Sid Richard-
son Hall (formerly Hotel
Brownwood) in downtown
Brownwood.
Roy Spence and Grady
Leach, co-chairmen, of Sen.
Yarborough's re-election cam-
paign in Brown County said,
"All of Senator Yarborough's
friends and supporters ih
Brown County and the sur-
rounding counties are invited
{to come to the coffee and
visit with Senator Yarbo-
rough."
Spence said the coffee and
reception will be in the Gold
Room of Richardson Hall.
The public affair is being
sponsored by the Young
Democrats of Howard Payne.
' Sen. Yarborough will also
speak to, two student groups
while in Brownwood, Satur-
day.
Sen. Yarborough will speak
at 3,2:30 p.m, to a group of
high school students at a
luncheon as part of the De-
mocracy in Action week ac-
tivities.
Saturday night, April 11,
Sen. Yarborough will speak
at the HPC Junior-Senior Ban-
quet.
: .
Texas Senator
At Junior-Senior
RALPH YARBOROUGH
Senator Ralph Yarborough
will highlight the annual Jun-
ior-Senior Banquet Saturday
evening, Joe Errington, jun-
ior class president announc-
ed. t . < • ■
The affair will begin at 7
p.m. on the 12th floor of Sid
Richardson Hall. Sen. Yarbo-
rough's address will top the
evening which has the theme
"South Pacific Island."
Tickets are on sale by jun-
ior claSs officers for $2' a per-
son. Seniors had until Wed-
nesday to pick up their com-
plimentary tickets, Errington
said, and juniors and seniors
are invited to date students
of all classes.
The annual banquet, at
which 4he junior class tra-
ditionally honors the outgo-
ing seniors, will climax a busy-
day in Brownwood for Yarbo-
rough which will see him at
a reception in Richardson
Hall's Gold Room at 3 p.m.,
open to the public, and at a
speaking engagement with a
group of high school students
at a luncheon at 12:30 p.m.
in the Gold Room as part of
the Democracy in Action week
series. ' IJIUTt
mt
Publications Board Announces
MONDAY, is Tap Day, when
members of honor organiza-
tions are recognized.
WEDNESDAY, Dr. C. Stan-J
ley Clifton of the Council on
Brown County, Alcoholics will |
speak- ^
■ . 'ft"-"". - '';-K
IIDAY, the chapel comr
Robert Campbell,
lan, will hold a diseus-
on chapel programming.
Applications for three posi-
tions on student; publications
are now being taken, Tessica
Martin, publications sponsor
and committee chairman an-
nounced..'
Positions open for the coin-
ing academic year are editor-
ship: of the Yellow Jacket
'newspaper, business manager
of the paper and editorship
of, the - Lasso yearbook, she
said. ■ • -'3
The Editors' assignments
each carry a workship of at
least $300 and three hours
journalism credit per semester,
and the business manager's
position carries at least a
$200 a semester workship.
interested Students should
come to Miss Martin's office
in the Journalism Building for
an interview with her as spon-
sor of the publication. The by-
laws of the publications com-
mittee requires that the stu-
dent then- submit a letter of
application to her as chairman
of the committee. Deadline for
application is 5 p.m. Friday,
April 25, Miss Martin said.
The publications board will
meet With the applicants and
interview them at 3' p.m. '
Wednesday, April 29, and po-
sitions will be chosen after-
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wards.
All regularly enrolled stu-
dents are eligible to apply.
Miss Martin stressed, but pref-
erences will be given those
students with high academic
standing and some class time
or other experience in journal-
ism, she said. Committee by-
laws also state that preference
be given students of junior
or senior standing. . • •
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The Howard Payne College Yellow Jacket (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, April 10, 1970, newspaper, April 10, 1970; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth128635/m1/1/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Howard Payne University Library.