4
-- ' cation a rants ti Over dents Federal Educat - nts so and it _ te to Firat denta million stu- applied for the Government's Basic Opportunity Gra- this school still not too la- ly. second year stu- . ., .s::. . ... between and $1,050 to help with ed- ucational expenses. Basic Grants provide eligible colleges, junior colleges and trade schools with a "floor" of financial se- curity. It coats nothing to for Basic Grants they never have to be paid back. Before applying for a Basic Grant, students must meet three U&portant cri- teria: yqu must be a US permanent resid- ent, you must: be enrolled Special Editi · on I . . . . . ut · eastern Alone ln · ReCeiving . FundS astern ! is the only Oklahoma to re- school ceive . year. was the baa figures at ion tng ' for new projects this appropriation by our Regents on of our enroll.:uem space utiliz- The new Industrial -E4u- Morrison of OltlahOm& -'C ity. cation Technology building Phase one is slated for is a three-phase completion by the end 'unding of $340,000 is for of this current school completion of . phase one year. with an additional $100,000 The completion of phase for equipment. . one of the new building The architect . selected will clear the way for by the Regentf is Ross remodeling of the current Ta Commission · Tightens -On · Out-Of-State Students wood working building for an art center and the met- als building tnto a two- story structure. Sex Discussion · ' Out-of tate students of all c leges . and univ- ersities Oklahoma will be requ to register their veh les in t he state of if they plan on being for longer than 60 This nouDCed General's ter to Mr Chairman - in exis it seems been an ment wi iaion was an- the Attorney ffice tn a let- D. M. Berry, the Oklahoma ion. is law baa been for some time t there has itten" · agree- otker states - enables s '-IUuents to drive their with out-of- state tags The let states, that ilow, "This means where the particular cirCQmatancea establiah 1 aa a - - lesal re of tbe fDdividua). tbeu it require latratl-. and payment of the license fee, ' but where the individual does not establish legal residence in Oklahoma, the law nevertheless requires registration wi,thout pay- - ment of a fee within fif- teen days after entry into the state and re·.oregistrat- ion with payment of the licence fee upon the ex- piration of a period of sixty days." For those who plsn on bold iug out until this bas all blown over, think agatn. There will be ag- ents on shortly after school bas. star ted to check records of all students to make sure the laM carried out. WITH AI.L OF TODAY 's pro- blems, a person can't be sure of having a level- headed plan for the fu- ture. It may be hair today and gone to wig ta.orrow. - I GOD, MAN AND WOMAN--SEX AND RELIGION? A new excitement has ap- peared in the course list- ings for religious educat- ion this semester. This one-hour, pass/fail elect- ive has many options ranging from- Bible, History, doetrtn a'Q.d prayer. And now--sex! The ina true tor of the course will be The Rev. Sudduth R. Cummings, priest . at St. John • s Episcopal Church in Durant. A new- to the Southeastern campus, Father Cummings was the Episcopal ' at Central State Univers- f. ty in Edmond, Oklahoma for two years before ar• rivtag here this past mer. (continued to p. 2) va1 a an eliaible institution of postsecondar y education; and you must be enrolled in this school after April 1, 1973. Eligibility for Grants is determined by a formula whiCh measures financial need. 'Ibis form- ula, applied uniforml y to all applicants, takes i n- to account such factors as family income a.nd as- sets, famil y and · mber of family members in tsecondar y school, and social security and vet- eran1s special education benefits. To apply for a Basic Grant, students must fill out an "application for determination of Basic Grant Eligibility". Th- ese applications are av- ailable at the Student Aid office on campus. ' Even if a student has - for ot h er financ- ial aid, he or she must fill out a separate ap- plication for a Basic Grant. Four to six weeks after submitting an application for the grant, you will _ receive a "Student Elig i:. pilit y Report" which no- tifies you of yo· ur elig- - i bility. The amount of the grant on financial need and the cost of the school you are attending. ' .The student must take this report to Paul Wile y, financial aid officer , to find out the amount of the award. Ask the financial aid officer now about Basic Grants. They could pro- vide a foundation to build on. --------------------- NOTICEIIII Because our type- setting machines are out of order, the paper has a new look this week. We · did want to furn is I) the campus a newspaper however, so we a few changes and here it. is. Btear with us.

ti va1 a - Southeastern Oklahoma State Universitycarmine.se.edu/digitized-annuals/The Southeastern... · 2014. 3. 27. · hair dress~rs, sound per sons, Light persons and stage persons

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  • - -

    '

    cation a rants • ti Over

    dents Federal Educat -nts so and it

    _ te to Firat

    • denta

    million stu-applied for the

    Government's Basic Opportunity Gra-

    this school yea~ still not too la-

    ly. second year stu-

    . ., .s::. ....

    between

    and $1,050 to help with ed-ucational expenses. Basic Grants provide eligible colleges, junior colleges and trade schools with a "floor" of financial se-curity.

    It coats nothing to for Basic Grants

    they never have to be paid back.

    Before applying for a Basic Grant, students must meet three U&portant cri-teria: yqu must be a US citize~or permanent resid-ent, you must: be enrolled

    • Special Editi·on

    I . . . . .

    ut · eastern Alone ln · ReCeiving. FundS astern! is the only

    Oklahoma to re-school ceive. build-~e year. was the baa figures at ion

    tng' for new projects this appropriation

    by our Regents on of our enroll.:uem

    space utiliz-

    The new Industrial -E4u- Morrison of OltlahOm& -'C ity. cation Technology building Phase one is slated for

    • is a three-phase proj~ct. completion by the end !·'unding of $340,000 is for of this current school completion of .phase one year. with an additional $100,000 The completion of phase for equipment. . one of the new building

    The architect. selected will clear the way for by the Regentf is Ross remodeling of the current

    Ta Commission ·Tightens -On · Out-Of-State Students

    wood working building for an art center and the met-als building tnto a two-story structure.

    Sex Discussion· Enter~Religion

    ' Out-of tate students of all c leges. and univ-ersities Oklahoma will be requ to register their veh les in t he state of if they plan on being for longer than 60

    This nouDCed General's ter to Mr Chairman -

    in exis it seems been an ment wi

    iaion was an-the Attorney

    ffice tn a let-D. M. Berry,

    the Oklahoma ion. is law baa been

    for some time t there has itten"· agree-

    otker states -enables s '-IUuents to drive their with out-of-state tags

    The let states, that ilow, "This means where the particular cirCQmatancea establiah 1 aa a - -lesal re of tbe fDdividua). tbeu it require ~J.ate latratl-. and

    payment of the license fee, 'but where the individual does not establish legal residence in Oklahoma, the law nevertheless requires registration wi,thout pay- -ment of a fee within fif-teen days after entry into the state and re·.oregistrat-ion with payment of the licence fee upon the ex-piration of a period of sixty days."

    For those who plsn on bold iug out until this bas all blown over, think agatn. There will be ag-ents on campu~ shortly after school bas. star ted to check records of all students to make sure the laM f~ carried out.

    WITH AI.L OF TODAY 's pro-blems, a person can't be sure of having a level-headed plan for the fu-ture. It may be hair today and gone to wig ta.orrow. - I

    GOD, MAN AND WOMAN--SEX AND RELIGION?

    A new excitement has ap-peared in the course list-ings for religious educat-ion this semester. This one-hour, pass/fail elect-ive has many options ranging from- Bible, History, doetrtn a'Q.d prayer. And now--sex!

    The ina true tor of the course will be The Rev. Sudduth R. Cummings, priest .at St. John • s Episcopal Church in Durant. A new-con~~&er to the Southeastern campus, Father Cummings was the Episcopal Chapl~ ' at Central State Univers-f. ty in Edmond, Oklahoma for two years before ar• rivtag here this past .a~ mer. (continued to p. 2)

    • va1 a

    an eliaible institution of postsecondary education; and you must be enrolled in this school after April 1, 1973.

    Eligibility for Basi~ Grants is determined by a formula whiCh measures financial need. 'Ibis f orm-ula, applied uniformly to all applicants, takes i n-to account such factors as family income a.nd as-sets, family s~e and au~ · mber of family members in

    • tsecondary school, and

    social security and vet-eran1s special education benefits.

    To apply for a Basic Grant, students must fill out an "application for determination of Basic Grant Eligibility". Th-ese applications are av-ailable at the Student Aid office on campus.

    ' Even if a student has -appl ~ed for other financ-ial aid, he or she must fill out a separate ap-plication for a Basic Grant.

    Four to six weeks after submitting an application for the grant, you will _receive a "Student Elig i:. pility Report" which no-tifies you of yo·ur elig--i bility.

    The amount of the grant depend~ on financial need and the cost of the school ~icb you are attending. ' .The student must take this report to Paul Wiley , financial aid officer , to find out the amount of the award.

    Ask the financial aid officer now about Basic Grants. They could pro-vide a foundation to build on. ---------------------

    NOTICEIIII Because our type-

    setting machines are out of order, the paper has a new look this week. We

    · did want to furn is I) the campus wi~h a newspaper however, so we mad~ a few changes and here it. is. Btear with us.

  • ..

    Page 2, THE SOUTHEASTERN, Durant, Okla. ,Jan 14, 1975 Sex (continued from p. 1) -•

    I? rice Control-Another · Try· t' I .f

    Unl~ss you are an historian, it is not likely yo~ are aware oJ the fact that wage and price controls have been t~ied many tUnes in the last 5000 years and have ~~ver ~o~ked. On the other hand, unless you are Rip Van WiQkle and have been asleep, you should be fully a~ar~ ~hat wage and price controls failed miserably -; thin • the last couple . of years. ·

    Desp,ite the most recent failure, a new campaign has been. launched by some politicians and a few economists to impqst 9ontrols again.

    Arch Boot~, president of the Chamber of Commerce of .the , Unit;ed States, recently pointed out why pol iti-cians, yho ~now better, keep talking up wage and price controls. He said: ·

    I . -" . . They do it because they hope to create an illusion ' . . of doi,ng s910ething, ': and they hope to distract people's ~ttention from· the real cause of inflation."

    • • Higher prices, ~hich hurt us all, are not the cuase

    of inf~a~ion. They sbnply are the most visible symp-tom. Th~refore, it does no good sLmply to clamp a

    I lid on prices while allowing cost pressures to build up. Contirols are nothing more -that patent medicine. They

    don't ~~d down prices, as our recent experience showed. No:r do . 1they solve our food or energy· shot.:tages.

    i.et P.s ; stop kidding ourselves. Five thousand years of failure should teach us something.

    Coming , Soon.~ .. The New ·scandals Coming soon will be the

    first annual SOSU Scandals production. This is an off-shoot from what has been known for year$ as The Sa-

    v~ge 'Scandals, but due to the elUninati.on of the

    I •

    wqrd Savage is now referred to as .SOSU Scandals. The date for this , years pro-duction is March 20.

    I '•.

    Under the !co-direction

    success: title, ideas, writers of poetry, prose, scripts, etc.

    There is also a need for artis·ts in the follow-ing capa~ities: Musicians, Set designers; dancers and singers. Make-up art-ists, c~stume designers, hair dress~rs, sound per-sons, Light persons and stage persons.

    At•central State, be led studies in mental health, justice and religion, sex-uality, mysticism aDd more traditional subjects through the Canterbury fellowship there.

    .. Asked about the purpose of the course, Cnnmings miDge stated that he lnteod& ~ examiDe the -b!/female relationship through • ~eligious perspective in or-der to develop a usable theology of sexuality.

    "This is important to study,'' be said, "because~ the attitudes and behav-.ior of us all toward the opposite sex are heavily influenced by religious factors that are often unrecognized, and mis-understood. "

    "Our thinking about sex is unavoidably permeated with a variety of moral and Bibical ideas which are frequently mixed in and mixed up with a lot of social and historical assumptions that distort wbat the ba•ic approach to our se~ual ity · ahould be from a religious bas-is."

    He went on to say, "this class wil~ give us a chance to really learn something . about what the "Bible actual ly says about. GOd's inten-tion in making us two aex-es, as well as to see how this has been worked out ill the history of the Ch-urch. The end result of our discussion should be a more adequate personal

    understanding of ourselves which w~ll help in all our relat~onships, especially that of marriage."

    The course outline in-cludes such topics as Old Testament creation stories, law and culture; the teach• • tass ' of _Christ aDd the rest of th~ New Testament; the cbangiDg pattern of sex• ual behavior through eh-urch history; and the de-velopment of such issues as women's rishts in re-lation to the "sin of sex-ism" a~ "Christian· Lib-eration."

    The format of t.'te class will be presentations by Father CunniDgs followed by discussion. There are

    no research papers or tests in the course. It will meet at St. John's Church parish hall at 6 p.m. each Weduesdav. Location of

    ~

    the church is 6th and Beech Str~~ts • . Discussions will be conducted over coffee.

    This new course · is a~ed at discovering, not what is the difference in- men aDd WQIIteD, but why there ls a difference and to find out what this means for life with God.

    Classified Ads LOST: Black music folder containing vocal music. Identified as Chorvette director's folder--reward $5 for return to music

    • department, Bob Pratt

    *****lclc Make $500

    of Peggie Burris and Em-ily W.aymire, the Sica.ndals will haVe a futuristlic copcept~ . Those wishing to p.a,rticipate are asked to ltrit th~ir Unagination run wi.ld. .

    Rhotographers ,. working people, ,playing people, set builders, supporters, organizations, etc.

    r-------------------------~ Qn each commission. C~pus and local represent~

    . . ~-Th~ .. directors are in

    need . of the .. f.ollowing . to make t~ t a

    I I

    I \

    ·~e would appreciate earing from volunteers

    sooner rather than later," states Peggie.

    Emily! announces that

    try-outs will be held I

    January 20-27 in Mont-gomery Auditorium. from 3:30 to 6:00 p.m. For any information phone 924-4465.

    'l .. E ·v.s \l.JD0'-1> Su~~ ._. AUO"\

    • I ..

    ' ·

    '

    at:~ 'S::. "-'~ c C>U \.\:> (,'? ., -Rn> (!)~ ..,.,u C...l'-'''-'A""'.s

    atives are needed for nationwide employee search. for full information write Sunner Advertising Co. P. 0. Box 643, Peoria, tl. 61601

    *****lc* FOR SALE: 70 Maverick, Ad-dress Taisir Barakat, 205 Sooner Apts. Durant, Ok.

    *****lc* FOR SALE: 1971 Street -Legal Honda"350" Kl pluss two helments with face shields. $450. Call 924-9992 after 7 p.m _or see Michael Spencer, room 316 Hallie McKinney Hall.

    ******* FOR SALE

    1·Black and white

    T.V. Per ect condition used only on Sundays by a little .• old iady to watch ·Every Wotban' s World with Dorothy Cox. $35. 924-5507 . ****lclc'lt

    FOR SALE: '68' Charger for sale_ $8~0~ Nice condition • mags, sterio radio, call 924-2891 or see it at 1028 College Blvd. !

    *****lc* WANTED: Used cook stove. r Call 924-0977 after 5 p.m.

  • ~lves

    . our Llly

    .u-Old r.ries, each-: rest

    the i ,. 1-le-as

    ·-• sex-

    188

    'Y d .re eats

    ch ach

    eech ill e. I'll-

    :d

    .-

    ch. te

    1.

    1-• )

    ' 1

    7

    r •

    1975

    I

    I

    ·Date Is Set For Leadership Conference '

    Once again the tUne drars near when the Pres-idept 's Club will host the1 6th annual Leadership Conlerence. February 6-8 ate the dates set for the I conference.

    . ~-ri~ 'the Lead·e~ship Conference, "members of the Pre.ident~'s Club, Student Sen,te; Student Faculty For an~ invited guest w.il meet to discuss the ' . various aspects and pro-ble~s of leadership on campr s.

    Activities will begin I

    February 6, at 7:00 p.m. in M~ntgomery Auditorium when \ Victor Marchetti, form~r CIA agent arid author of The Cult of In-tell~ence, will address memb rs of the student b~dy \ a~d the surrounding c ommJn 1. ty •

    Ttie actual Leadership Conf~rence will begin Fri-day a1t 11:30 a.m. with a lunch~on in the South-easte~n ballroom. Dusty Martin, aid to the gov-ernor and former SOSU

    stu~ent will be the speak-·er for the event to be at~ tended by members of the Presi4ent's Club and in-vited lguests.

    After the luncheon, the participants will move to Texoma Lodge where they will enter a leadership training session to be

    lead by Joe and Lynda McNulty.

    Friday's activities will end with a banquet at the lodge for members of the President's Club and invited guests. Julia Scott Reed, columnist for the Dallas Morning News will be the banquet speaker. The public is invited to the speaking engagement which will ~egin at 8:00 p.m.

    Saturday, the discus·-sion will begin with a proposed seminar on pro-moting campus events. Af-ter the seminar, the part-icipants will break down into discussion groups for studying typical campus problems.

    The conference at the lodge will end with a wrap-up session to be held at 12:30 p.m. At this time Dr. Leon Hibbs, presi~ent of SOSU, Ed Goeas, governor of the Oklahoma Intercollegiate Legislature and Fred Col-lins, president of the

    R '7

    bert Thomas Leads Heart Fund Drive ..

    Dr. Robert Thomas, Durant~ will lead the efforts to promote an invest~ent in people

    , security in Bryan Co-unty.

    The ~ryan County Chairman of the 1974 Heart F~nd Drive was appointbd by the State Campaigp Chairman of the Oklahoma Heart As-sociation, Garold Hol-stine, fh. D.

    The focal point for this ' ye~r is to invest in a better and health-ier futdre for yourself and lov~d ones.

    Last1year, more than

    25,000 people died in Oklahoma, 15,300 of these deaths were due to the state's .laigest health problem heart and blood vessel 9iseases.

    The dounty Chairman explain~d that the pro-ceeds frbm the February Fund Dri;ve will go to further the work of the

    lahoma tion thr educatio

    • serv1.ce.

    The

    Heart Associa-ugh research,

    and community

    i,gn will not

    only encourage investing in a healthier future but inform the to acquire its.

    residents healthier

    how hab-

    Literature and educa-tional information on rish factors, diet and heart disease, and warn-ing signs of heart attack will be disturbing during the campaign.

    Thomas commented that February is the peak per -iod for information al-though programs are held through out the calendar year.

    Those interested in • helping in the investment

    of people security please . . contact Dr. Robert Thomas S.E. State College, Durant

    Job Opportunity

    ATTENTION: Earn $100 per W L k . Part time .•. select yo\1 ... - own hours. For in-terview, call collect Sherman 214 893-0924.

    ******* . FOR SALE: Extra nice '68 Buick Skylark. Must see and drive to appreciate. Call Robert Payne 924-8352.

    Student Senate will add-ress the members of the conference.

    To wind up the acti-vities, there will be a free dan~e held at the . Student Activities Build-ing. The dance is sched-uled to begin at 8:00

    P.:~ · All member.,S of the campus population are in-vited to the dance.

    Students who desire to .

    attend the Leadership Con-

    ference should contact Fred Collins, president of the Student Seqate, or Ruth Love, vice~president.

    Off c~pus partici-pants in the conference will be the executive of-ficers and core members at the Oklahoma Intercol-legiate Legislature and representatives from the Oklahoma Students for Higher Education.

    1973 TOurism R.anks •

    SecOnd In Oklahoma

    '

    In 1973 tourism ranked as the second largest in-ustry in Oklahoma in

    terms of dollars spent in the state.

    Because of this first annual Southe~stern Okla-homa Tourism Conference began last Friday morning at 9 a.m. sharp with se-venty-five persons in at-tendance and more trickl-ing through the door until by noon ~he total head count hit 90 persons.

    vision of Tourism in the State of Missouri, urged Oklahoman's to think of tourism as an industry in its own right--not a fringe benefit.

    Entitled "How To Make Money In Recreation," the conference was aimed at lo-cal southeastern Oklahoma business people whose in-come derives from tourism

    -in some form. •

    Conference attendees were resturant owners, motel and hotel owners, lodge managers, boat- and fishing concerns, pro- . ducers of novelties, local beverage distributors of all sorts and other busi-ness people with at least a fringe concern for the tourist industry.

    The morning's major speaker, Mr. James Pas-ley, Director of the Di-

    Workshops, panel dis-cussions and film pre-sentations filled the tightly scheduled inter-vals in which those pre-sent could brouse among the brightly l it, unusual displays set i nto the Blue & Gold Room for the con-ference.

    Representatives of Ok-lahoma's Bicentennial activities. And another booth displayed eye -catch-ing models of homes built out of heavy duty foam which qesembled futuristic homes from an age to come.

    In all, eleven booth displays filled every available space with ip-formation and more ideas concerning tourism.

    The conference was sponsored joUntly by Southeastern and Fun Country which is one of the six regions in which Oklahoma is d~~ided for • tourism purposes.

    the Southeastern i

    Lela Lyons ••• • • •·· • • • • • • • •• • .FAibr 0 •

    Ciady Floyd · . ••••••• Business MaMger carla Kella"m. • • • .Production Managv Demis Grundy. • • : •• .oSporta Editor

    statr Reporters Don IJeeh CWf Ross .• Ricbard Craig 1 Kieth .M01itgomery

    Pbotlccx apbers James W•ver ROll nav6e Nancy Blankenship Jonathan Roark

    I

    PJvdtttttoa Clarlie Kana A.rt:lat

    ~ -

    Jnhnna Sbeoberd

    Gary Taylor

    Advisors Keo iehols

    Rudy Manley

  • I . I I

    o I o l· . . • t .s .

    ' ' I

    ' . t I I

    0 I • . . I I

    I I ' .

    0

    J I I

    j ' '

    I

    • • •

    i 'Dill . I

    one ' I . . .

    • 1 During , l974, Southwes~-: •ern .Be 1 added spme.73 ,000 te1eph nes throughout Ok-lahoma • . That's enough to

    ' 1 serve three brand new . cities the ' size: of Bar-

    . I ,

    1 tle.svi~le, Shawnee and Ardmore, comb lined. . ' .

    "Ancl adding that many phones was just one of the thilngs thCiit made ' 74 a busy ~ear~" said company manager· Mike Harmon.

    "For every ~elephone . . '

    we gain, we -i.t\stall eight and remove s~en, so we handle a -lot of customer

    I

    requeA ~,.; for s~rvice. ,·,· ' I

    ~ Soutihwesiter~ Bell spent a - ~eco~d $115 ~*Ilion to exP,and and 1imp~ove tele~ ·phone service ~ placed some 4 «8 billi~n . conductor feet of cable and had

    I a recor~ . payroll of $105.4 million !for 9600 "

    . ' employees in Oklahoma in

    ' 1974 • .

    .. And th~ co~any ' s state and · local j taxes lf st year amounted to $\8,.3 milllofi, klso a

    , I ..,. _ 1

    re~~ord.

    By year's. end, 99 per . cent of the 1company's 1 • .6. million phones in Ok-lahpma ·were equipped for "Onf!-PLus" dial ilng, and neatly 56 per ~~t--those iil Fh~ Oklahoma pity and Tulsa vicinities--had "Zero-Pilus" dialing cap-ability. ,

    .., '

    Provid.ing " ' o-Plus" ' ' .

    in and •round Tu sa was

    it"ons one ·of

    1southwestern

    Bell's ~jor projects . complete4 during the year. Brea~ng ground for $53 ~illion expan- . sion project itn Oklahoma City was 1another.

    A Number 2 'Electronic to servic.e in Moore, becoming the first such electronic central office designed 1to serve medium-sized ~ommunities in the state.

    ' Statewide, Southwest-

    ern Bell ; established a faster, more efficient method of handling cus-tomer records with con-o version to a system feat-uring a television-like

    display of service or-ders. The· new SORD (South-western Order Retrieval

    >

    ,and Distribution) system is the forerunner of an even more streamlined op-eration for 1975.

    . .

    A new line of decora• tor and "antique" phones was offered Okl ahomans

    '

    beginning in October, and approval of miscellanious rate changes was received

    _, I

    from the Oklahoma Corpor-ation Commission in Dece-mber. "'!he new rates will

    help meet - the constantly increasing expenses of providing top-quality te-lephone s~rvice," the manager said.

    By Southwes to gain

    of growth, . Be i l expects t 75,000 tel-

    -- __ .... ___ --..-- .. ·-

    ,,

    ephones in Oklahoma during 1975 1 ' installing 610,000 and removing .535,000 to register the

    • I

    1ncrease. A record $123 million services as "Zero-Plus" calling is scheduled.

    ) l

    • •

    ~us I

    ea~ .

    "All-in-all, 1974 has ;been a busy year f~r us," the manager said. ·~e've

    I

    accomplished a lot in terms of ire.rviCif and growth, and we're looking forward to another productive year in 1975."

    Job Opportunities - .

    Fort Sill is recruit-ing to fill a vacancy for ~echanical Engineer, GS-830-11, $15,481. per year. Qualified persons inter~ ested in applying for this position should $Ub-mit a SF 171, "Perso~al Qualifications State-ment," to Civilian Per-sonnel Division, Recruit-ment. and Placement Branch PO Drawer 3308, Fort Sill Oklahoma 73503, ATTN: Mrs. Lee.

    The u.s. Civil Service Commission announces job opportunities for Elec-tronic Techn.icians. These jobs, which range from grade GS-5 ($8,500 per year) to GS-11 ($15,841 per year),~re with the Federal Aviation Admin-istration and other Fed-eral agencies in the

    of Oklahoma. 'Elec-

    • lt.

    Heart Attack, Stroke High Blood Pressure

    Rheumatic Fever

    tronic Technicians perform technical work involved in maintenance or inst~llation, which includes tests, adjusbDent, or other technical assis-tance, on ~lectronic systems, quipment or devices.

    More formation may be obtain d by visiting the Feder 1 Job Informa-tion Cente , Room 177, 210 North st Sixth Street, Ok ahoma City, Ok-lahoma, or1• by calling 231-4948 in Oklahoma City.

    Those persons in other Oklahoma cities may call toll-free (800) 522-3781.

    WANTED: 71-72 Dodge or Ford Van. Call 924-6305.

    FOR SALE: '69 Toyota Mark II Sedan-Excellent condit very clean. Call Rock Ash-craft, ext 221.

    C311

    ·~·· ....... IW.M:srs110 !II

    llecalt..llllp ~~-~ •