/~ .3 OFFICIAL PROGRAM OFFICIAL WATCH SOUTHERN METHODIST-OHIO STATE FOR THIS GAME CONTENTS The University Presidents ......................................................... 2 ****.*** Southern Methodist University Officials .................................... 3 LONGINES Story of Southern Methodist University ... ... .. .. ... ...... .. .. .. ... ... .. 4 Scenes on the Campus at Southern Methodist University .......... 5 THE WORLD'S Ohio State University Football MOST HONORED Player Pages ................................... 6, 12, 16, 30, 34, 40, 44 WATCH® S.M.U. Football Coaching Staff; Ohio Stadium Information ........ 7 10 world's fair 1rand prizes ~\ '3J~ 28 1old medals ~ ~ Ohio State University Football Coaching Staff .......................... 8 -~ Football Penalties and Signals .................................................... 10 Southern Methodist Football Player Pages .............. 14, 22, 32, 36 Longines watches are recognized as OFFICIAL for timing world Ohio State University Winter Sports Schedules ......................... 17 championships and Olympic sports Ohio State University Athletic Staff ............................................ 18 in all fields throughout the world. The 1968 Ohio State University Football Squad ....................... 20 The Ohio State University Football Roster .................................24 Southern Methodist University Football Roster ......................... 29 Half-Time Music by The Marching Band ...................................... 38 First Football Team to Fly ........................................................... 46 Big Ten Football Schedules for 1968 .........................................48 Where Big Ten Football is Played ............................................. 50 Ohio State Cross Country and Soccer Schedules ....................... 52 Wilbur E, Snypp, Editor and Advertising Manager John F. Hummel, Circulation Manager National Advertising Representative: Spencer Advertising Co., 271 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y. TODA Y'S COVER Lon1ines Ultra·Chron •8205, automatic with calendar, $175. Features a scene on other Ultra-Chron Model,, $115 to $595. the Oval, looking south toward O r t o n H a I I, Our mileage ingredients are famed for its belfry. The the fabulous, new one reason. NC7 is another. building, completed in Only Sinclair has it. 1893, was named in LONGINES ULTRA-CHRON® NC-7 controls harmful memory of the universi­ Guaranteed Accurate To A Minute A Month* ty's first president, Dr. engine deposits. Keeps your The ultimate personal chronometer, Edward Orton, professor guaranteed accurate to a minute a month­ engine in shape. of geology. The chimes a mean average of 2 seconds per day. And when your engine's in the tower have been Ultra-Chron tells the date, hour, minute, in shape, you get even more a part of campus life second. Never needs batteries. Winds automatically while you wear It. All Proof9 miles per gallon. Naturally. since 1915. They ring every hour and can be construction defeats water, dust, shock, magnetism. At Longines-Wittnauer heard for five miles. Franchised Jewelers, coast-to-coast. Program cover pictures *Your Longlne1-Wlttnouer Fronchi1ed Jeweler will odiust ~ S1nc/01r have been taken by your Ultro-Chron to this occurocv, If necessary. members of the univer­ Guarantee II for one year. sity photography de­ LONGINES-WITINAUER WATCH CO. partment. NEW YORK MONTREAL • GENEVA Maker et watches Of Tht Nl1h11t Character For Ovtr A Century The University Presidents Representing Southern Methodist University * * Hayden Fry Director of Athletics, Head Football Coach DR. NOVICE G. FAWCETT President, The Ohio State University Lester Jordan Asst. Director of Athletics * * Dr. Willis M. Tate Dr. Harold Jeskey President, Southern Methodist Univenity Chairman, Faculty Committee, Athletics 2 3 This Is Southern Methodist University S outhern Methodist University is a coeduca­ from business firms and friends. Southern Methodist U niv~rsity tional institution comprised of nine schools, in­ At its opening session in 1915, SMU had two stitutes, and colleges. Baccalaureate degrees are buildings, 706 students, a 35-man faculty, an offered in 85 fields endowment fund of $279,178, and a 133-acre of study, masters' campus. degrees in 60 Today, these relatively few years later, the fields, and doctoral University inventories 80 buildings in its ex­ degrees in nine. cellent $53,000,000 physical plant, total assets During its 52-year of $95,000,000, a faculty of 600, an endowment history, SMU has of $22,000,000, an on-campus enrollment that granted 33,000 de­ has averaged approximately 7,000 the past few grees. years, and a 155-acre campus. UMPHREY LEE STUDENT CENTER SMU was found­ The University has become the second largest ed in 1911 and held private university in the entire South and FONDREN SCIENCE BUILDING its first classes in Southwestern geographic areas of the U.S. Seotember, 1 9 1 5. while establishing an enviable faculty-student It is located in sub­ ratio of 1-14. urban University SMU's educational resources include such Park, a 15-minute impressive equipment as a major seismological OWEN FINE ART CENTER drive from down­ observatory, the South's largest herbarium, a town Dallas, nuclear engineering laboratory, a closed-circuit Campus Scenes T e x a s. SMU is educational television network of its own, the noted for the hhrh the second largest university-library system in DALLAS HALL - SMU'S OLDEST BUILDING quality of its academic programs, and its cam­ the Southwest, a $3,500,000 computing center, pus is known for the beauty developed by the an $8,500,000 fine arts center, one of the na­ unifying theme of modern Georgian architec­ tion's outstanding science information centers, ture. and many other fine facilities for instruction SMU was established in Dallas by The Meth­ and research. odist Church, and management of the Univer­ Sixty of SMU's buildings have been con­ sity is vested by SMU's Board of Trustees in a structed since the end of World War II, and Board of Governors of civic, business, and reli­ SMU has assembled a faculty which includes a gious leaders (Methodist and non-Methodist). number of professors internationally renowned President of SMU is Dr. Willis M. Tate, a in their respective fields. 1932 ~uate of the University. Although SMU is non-sectarian in its teach­ SMU is composed of: The University College, ing, its relationship with The United Methodist the schools of Humanities and Sciences, Busi­ Church fosters a high standard of moral and ness Administration, Law, the Arts, the Grad­ religious principles on campus. The faculty is uate School of Humanities and Sciences, the In­ composed of scholars from various churches, stitute of Technology, Perkins School of Theol­ and in an average enrollment most of the reli­ ogy, and Dallas College (a downtown evening­ gious faiths in America are represented. The school division). student body is usually less than 50 percent SMU's academic programs are accredited by Methodist. the top educational standardizing agencies in Over the past few years SMU has drawn its the country, and the University has one of the students from all over Texas' 254 counties, from three chapters of Phi Beta Kappa in Texas (and every state in the Union, from the District of the only one in the state at a church-related Columbia, and from as many as 50 foreign school). countries in one year. As a private institution, SMU receives no tax The University grows each year in national revenues. Operating funds come from tuition stature and now brings more than 40 per cent and fees of students, income from investments, of its students from outside Texas. A decade gifts for buildings and endowment, and annual ago, less than 10 per cent of SMU's students contributions for current operating expenses came from states other than Texas. S.M.U. LEGAL CENTEa - DALLAS 4 5 Southern Methodist Football Coaching Staff DAVID FOLEY DIRK WORDEN WILLIAM LONG Co-Captain Co-Captain No. 24-Quartorback, Education No. 70-Tackle, EnginHring No. 56- linobackor, Education OHIO STATE Kneeling-head coach Hayden Fry (second from right) (lek to right) Herb Zimmerman, Dudley Parker, Dave Smith. Standing-(lek to right) John Young, Herman Morgan, Jim Acree, Jerry Moore, Ray Utley. OHIO STADIUM INFORMATION TICKET SALES VARSITY "0" AVAILABLE TICKETS are for 111le at gate I (closed end). Poat-game meeting place of Varsity "O" will be in the The Ticket Office is located in the southeast corner of the recreation center of the stadium dormitories. St. John Arena, just 100 yards north of the closed end of SERVICE TO PATRONS the Stadium. Phone 293-2624. Emergency medical treatment i1 available in special first Permanent seats: 71,826. Total Seating capacity, 81,455. aid quarters back of Sections 11 and 12 in "B" deck. A Construction coat: $1,341,000. Financed chiefly by gifts mobile section 1110 i1 available on the ground level at the aggregating $1,083,000, pledged by 13,000 persona. northeast section of the Stadium. Pay telephones are located Seats in Section A: 32,606; Section B, 13,979; Section C, at Sections SA, SA, 10A, 17A, 19A, 20A, 22A, and at the southeast corner of the Stadium. GERALD EHRSAM 21,145. "A" Boxes, 1,552; "B" Boxes, 1,748; "BB" Boxes, 796. NICHOLAS ROMAN RUFUS MAYES Total permanent seats, 71,826. A LOST and FOUND WINDOW i1 maintained at the north No. 28-Defonaive Halfback, No. 89-End, Adm. Science No. 73- Tackle, Education Temporary seats: South 1tand1, 4,858; field 1eat1, 4,771. or closed end of the Stadium until 30 minutes after
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