The Optimist (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 22, Ed. 1, Friday, March 11, 1960 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : illus. ; page 14 x 10 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.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:
wm .su "rmmmmm
WfMiMij' 'n?:" '? ' . x -v . Jti't v v ..ti r.fitmFiBRjat.' yt a'" ay. 'jt: .. . v ' Li tr.wzfi- M-gsTTtVUmTs:
W
t-.MMJ-fc ljwnAfjrfTitfa-
i
w
rm
Sftl
M.
M
M
li..
-& V
'
h .
r . v.
Prom
P;fi rflwwU
f -
Ipient Men TM&tlrevTf " enee Majors Receive
:- - a -ii Annual utto roster Awara
in nistory meet i nursaay
;Vr
Three outstanding historians
tyill'be on campus next Thursday
to lecture In a history seminar
entitled "America In the 1960's:
iluttrese or Bridge?"
' Dr. Boyd C. Shafer of Washing-
ton'' D.C. Dr Dexter Perkins of
the University of Rochester and
Dr. Lewis Hanke of the Univer-
sity of Texas will be featured In
the day-long activities beginning
at 10:30 a.m. All lectures will be
in Roberson chapel.
The seminar is designed for
history teachers in West Texas.
DR. SHAFER will speak at
10:30 on American relations with
Europe in the 1960s. Dr. Perkins'
topic is the American Foreign
Policy and Dr. Hanke will speak
on the United States and itsLat-
Livestock Judges
Win Fourth Place
The ACC -livestock ..judging
placed fourth in the Houston Fat
Stock .Show judging contest.
ACC was second in beef cattle
judging -and JLayton -Black of
Lometa -Texas -was -the -high
point contestant in beef cattle.
Ken Wesner of Cordell Okla.
was fifth high man in judging
hogs.
Both Black and Wesner were
among the ten high individuals
and each was awarded a medal.
The other member of the team
was Elvin Brown of Dora New
Mexico.
ANMMfttniMAM
FAAjoyM
Open 12:45
CONTINUOUS
PERFORMANCES
1:20-3:50-6:30-9:00
Adm. 1.00-70-35
Now thru Tue.
YulBmnner
T GlNAi
LOLLOBRIGIDA
The epic story that
haii enthralled
the world
1 years!
.MMHlk
nkfoi
. GEORGE SANDERS MARISA PAVAfl
Tidnirama' TBcMctlr
in American neighbors.
Dr. Shafer is editor of the
American Historical Society Re-
view. He is also executive secre-
tary of the American Historical
Association. He took his A.B.
from Miami (Ohio) University
Scholarship
Date Nears
Deadline for turning in appli-
cations for the $100 Modern lan-
guage scholarship will be March
31 according to Dr. J. W. Treat
head of the modern language de-
partment. Applicants must have com-
' pleted one year of college foreign
language study or the equiva-
lent; must be a full-time student
in ACC; and must be planning
to major in a modern foreign
language.
Applications are also being
taken for a second $100 scholar-
ship to be offered during the fall
semester. Both awards have been
provided by the Galaxy men's
social club.
Additional information and ap-
plication blanks may be obtain-
ed in Dr. Treat's office Room 13
In the faculty office building west
of the Library.
vand his A.M. and PU.D. from the
University of Iowa.
He is a member of Phi Beta
Kappa and is a former chairman
of the University of Arkansas
History department. Among the
books he has written Is one en-
titled "Nationalism. Myth and
Reality" (1955.)
' DR. PERKINS is a noted au-
thority on the Monroe Doctrine.
He holds A.B. and Ph. D. degrees
from Harvard and has taught at
the University of' Cincinnati
Cornell university and now the
University of Rochester. He is also
a member of Phi Beta Kappa.
Works on the Monroe Doctrine
are widely known and include
"The American Approach to
Foreign Policy" written in 1952.
DR. HANKE is a professor of
Latin American History at Texas
in addition to his duties with the
Institute for Latin American af-
fairs. He holds the B.S. and M.S.
degrees from Northwestern and
the Ph. D. from Harvard.
Before going to the University
of Texas lie was director of the
Hispanic Foundation of the Li-
brary of Congress from 1939 to
1951. He is a member of the
American Historical association
and several Latin American his-
torical societies.
He has authored many works
on Latin Amerlcan'hlstory.'
Ten students in the ACC science
department have been named as
recipients of the annual Otto Fos-
ter Awards.
Six of these awards went to
chemistry i majors: Bryant Cobb
Abilene senior; Jesse Faust Ros-
coe senior; Robert Gipson Odes-
sa senior; Bill Lowry Abilene
senior; Robert Smith Abilene
senior and Sue Crisp Victoria
senior.
BOTH THE physics and biology
department claimed two winners
each. Don Cornelius Amarillo
senior and Barbara Sikes Port
Lavaca senior won the awards
In the biology field. Russell Kln-
nlngham Alice junior and Eugene
Counch Dallas senior won
physics award.
These annual awards are tc
encourage students who are
majoring in science to recognize-
individual ability industry and
achievement In their sciences.
It was set up in 1954 by Otto
Foster Cleburne druggist and
long time friend of ACC who-
served on the board of trustees
from 1921 to 1937.
Foster his wife and daughter
Mrs. Rita Stocking of Washing-
ton D. C. a 1927 graduate of
ACC made the gift of $1000.00 to-
the school to be divided each
year among 10 winners.
FOSTER was at ACC last week
and presented the prizes of
$100.00 to Don H. Morris ACC
president who In turn presented
them to the students.
Coffman Attends Physics Meeting at Rice
Dr. Moody Coffman ACC
physics department head attend
ed the state meeting of the
American .Physical Society at
Rice Institute March 4-5.
He presented a paper entitled
"Physical Theory of Sandstorms."
Dr. Coffman is vice-president
of the Physical Sciences section
of Texas Academy of Sciences;
sec.-tres. of Texas Association of i
American Physics Teachers; he is 'J
listed in Who's Who in American
Men of Science for 1960 and
Who's Who in Education.
CONVENIENT CREDIT
No Carrying Charges
GpwAmdS
tea pimk ?.
.1 JEWELER
See The Dinah Show Chevy Show in color Sundays NBC-TV The Pet Boone Chevy Showroom weekly ABC-TV
A .
SIX-PASSENGER
CAR OR
STATION SEDAN
...C0RVAIR IS BOTH!
A wonderfully ateful folding seat nukes every
Corvair two cars bi one. just one quick ffio and yea
Increase the biases and parcel space to 2&9 cable
feet And Just at simply you're back to comfortable
six-passenger capacity tfs 'standard equipment
... and extraordinarily practical.
Corvair does car-pool duty with the biggest
and best of them. Going to work or school or
out for the evening you've got a genuine
six-scatcr. As for carting around piles of stuff
instead of people just look at Corvair's station-
sedan load space with the rear seat folded. And
when that's full you can start on the trunk.
Corvair you sec is no ordinary compact'
car. No others ore so versatile so ingeniously
engineered with independent suspension at
all four wheels an air-cooled rear engine
that never needs water or antifreeze. You just
can't compare anything else coming out
these days with a Corvair. Drive one . . . soon.
For economical Oftl21
transportation- VViY ggHS
' n
?iSSSm-'-iii
x TWtlHnflHnanananananananananananaV f -A nt ikaV lanaB Pi !tjBfcMMlnBJjiBBBWIm. iMV?'
KilVB mvtfsfl aVVnHnMnHMnHiBifln JP y
This h the Corvair 700 4-Door Sedan
Drive itit'sfun-tastic! See your heal authorized Chevrolet dealer for fast deliveryt favorable deals.
1 ' 'm& f
f
...
&2P?
'
-m
ti
?I
tW
"&
&
$&'
'
: s7
0
. It""
'H
r w)T
-
ss
I' ?
I1 V
-! .
llllilliiii
ifcrtbrtlMIEDHttTEII
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.
The Optimist (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 22, Ed. 1, Friday, March 11, 1960, newspaper, March 11, 1960; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth95967/m1/2/: accessed April 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Abilene Christian University Library.