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Minnesota State University Moorhead RED: a Repository of Digital Collections

The Western Mistic Student Newspapers

5-4-1948

The Western Mistic, May 4, 1948

Moorhead State Teachers College

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This News Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Newspapers at RED: a Repository of Digital Collections. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Western Mistic by an authorized administrator of RED: a Repository of Digital Collections. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Western MiSTiC Western Minnesota State Teachers College

Vol. 78 Moorhead, Minnesota Tuesday, May 4,1948 No.7

Corporation 'Hell Bent fer Heaven' Nominations PROM LEADERS—the Xorman Carlsons and the Duano Andersons. Plays Tomorrow Night Marlowe Wegner and Miss Marion Tomorrow at 8:15 in Weld Auditorium, Hell Bent fer Heaven, a Smith have been added to the list three-act drama by Thatcher Hughes, will be presented by Alpha Psi of candidates for the two faeultv AH College Prom Set Omega, national dramatics fraternity, according to Allen Erickson, dir­ positions to be named with two stu­ ector of the play. dent members to the board of direc­ tors of the Student Corporation at Tickets will be available at the door for sixty-five cents each, but For Friday Evening its annual meeting Wednesday, May students will be admitted by presenting their activity tickets. 5, at 10 a.m. in Weld auditorium. In this drama of North Carolina mountaineers, the central charac Leading the grand march at the all-college spring prom Friday eve­ ter, Rufe Pryor, a curious mixture of religious cant and jealous passion, ning, May 7, will be Mr. and Mrs. Norman Carlson and Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Thurber and Dr. William revives a shooting feud between the Duane Anderson, Moorhead. Carlson and Anderson are presidents of the Waite are the other nominees to the Hawks and the Lowrys—and nearly senior and junior classes respectively. faculty positions, and Joe Gotta, succeeds in bringing death and ruin Commission Sets In the receiving line will be President and Mrs. O. W. Snarr; Miss Robert Brown, Marvin Kuhn, Phyllis Morben, Susan Lewis, and Hawley upon ' them both. Virginia FitzMaurice and her escort, Walter Grantham; social commission- Eia are the student aspirants. Included in the cast are Dick er Iva Shafer, Oakes, N. Dak., and Gompf, Fargo; Marion Hankebo, Senior Day For All faculty and students are mem­ her escort, Paul Pawlowski, Perham; Underwood; Eugene Shiek, Fargo; bers of the MSTC Student Exchange and Student Commission President John W. MacDonald, Aitkin; Paul Tuesday, May 11 •ditfe Ot Stan Mun-ay with Ruth Haarstick, Inc., which operates the bookstore. Bjelland, Erskine; Leonard Olson, Fergus Falls. Students may not vote for tue Warroad; and Ruth Hnarstick, Fer­ Tuesday, May 11, has been de­ gus Falls. The prom will be held from 9-12 faculty representatives, and the fa­ signated as Senior day for high tyieat @inc(e in the big gym with music provided culty may not vote for student mem­ Jean Kjorlie, Fargo, is assistant school seniors from Minnesota towns by the Big Statesmen. Stardust is bers. director; Burton Woodward, Dragon at MSTC, according to Stan Mur­ the chosen theme. Terrace, stage manager; and Helen ray, Student Commission president. Annual reports will be presented Ruebke, Ada, and Elaine Nelson, Sponsored by the Student Commis­ Refreshments will be served the at this time. Moorhead, prompters. sion, "Senior day" provides an op­ There's a big blob of mud on a dancers in Ingleside during the eve­ portunity for the high school student MiSTiC offico window. You'd never ning. to see what MSTC can offer him, oy guess who threw there—Stan Mur- The Student Commission annually Announce New Policies Regarding actually observing college students sponsors the spring prom as the final in their regular day's activities. Who'd have thought the Student all-college social activitiy of the year. Transfer, Non-Curriculum Students Included in the plans for the day Commission Prexy would stoop to are a luncheon and tour of the cam­

Band Tour to Winnipeg Starts Today; Ada First Concert The MSTC band's concert tour be­ Normal school in Winnipeg. D. B. accompany the band OD the tour, Dell Herreid, Elburn Cooper, Ruth Third row: Duane Anderson, Ar- gan this morning as the group leff Moorehead, director of the teacher- speaking before each concert to in­ Janneck, Clifford Aamoth, Roy Fraki, min Johnson, Clifford Gilbertson, for Ada where their first concert training school, has invited the city's troduce the band and to explain the f^crnice Janke, Marlys Olson, and Beryl Bailey, Rodger Jensen, Ruth will be at 9 a.m. today. They will high school students to hear the band educational opportunities offered by Bette Cowan. Simpson, Donald Nelson, Harriet appear in Crookston at 3 p.m and then. Wednesday night will be spent MSTC. Carlson, Thomas McDougall, John Included in the second row are at East Grand Forks this evening, in Winnipeg. t Johnson, Dewey Possehl, Bob Melby, Bertram McGarrity is directing the Garth Stouffer, Wayne* Peterson, staying overnight in the homes of T Bob Anderson, Arley Lyseng, George j Concerts on the return rip. Thurs­ band on this tour. Joyce Gosslee, Carol Brooks, Norma East Grand Forks high school stu­ Olson, Marjorie King, LaRayne day, May 6, will be presented at Reading from left to right includ- Olson, Joanne Curran, Eloise Monsou, dents. Oakes, Kenneth Hagen, Susan Lewis, Hallock at 11 a.m. and at Thief ed in the front row are Ramona Du- Marlis Malde, Phyllis Filipi, Beverly Tomorrow afternoon they have a River Falls at 3 p.m. pont, Janice Glasgow, Ray Johnson, Dailey, Jerry Sundet, Beth Schultz, Bernice Lindgren, Loretta Bergos, concert scheduled in the Provincial Howard Binford, Luverne, will Marilyn Hitchcock, Jerry Jorringdal, and Ferne Stennes. and Ervin Schlick. Page 2 The Western MiSTiC Editor's Mail Janice Christensen Plays In Writer Defends Humanities U Band Under McGarrity Janice Cliristensen, daughter of Humanities, why

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J Briggs Floral Company i MOORHEAD, MINN. DIAL 3-1373 OVER 32 YEARS P«ge 4 The Western MiSTiC Marlowe Wegner Shows Will Play at All-College Spring Prom Chinese Coins in Exhibit A collection of Chinese coins be­ per and made in pieces to represent longing to Marlowe Wegnor will be objects of actual value. Therefore, displayed be(finning next week in there were such pieces as "knife the show-case in the art room, third money", "pants money", and "spade money "! floor Mac Lean. Mr. Wegner first Three thousand BC money had became interested handles, but this type of money was in foreign coins later disregarded in favor of small M a boy. It was­ round coins with square holes in the n't until he went middle. This type of money was to China with the widely used in China up until the fourth Air Force Revolution in 1912 when the pres­ that be decided to ent type of coin was adopted. specialize in Chin­ ese coins. lie be­ Mr. Wegner has four thousand Chinese coins. He will display the came acqnainted with a curator of a museum in the back part of China most. interesting and odd-shaped where he obtained most of his rare ones. Many of them will protray the coins. history of the Chinese eoin, while others are interesting because of the The history of Chinese coins dates back nearly five thousand years. At stories and legends concerning Chin­ that time money was cast in cop- ese rulers who issued them. Substitute Lantern, Apron, Horse Plague Yearbook Staff Completes Proofing,- Release Dragon About May 1 5

Seven in Cast of Hell Bent fer Heaven The executive staff of the DRAGON —Dorothy Jones, Moorhead; James simulate anything from a insipid The milk bottlet Oh, that's a lan­ By Suth Haarstieh Imogene Johnson Dokken, Thief River; Armin John­ breeze to a raging hurricane. Then tern. And the sword is a gun. The son, Pelican Rapids; adviser Clarence If you were to walk in on a rehear­ too, the script called for the sound feed sack Marion has tied around her Sings on KFGO sal of Hell-BetU fer Heaven one of of a galloping horse. Since Weld waist is not for the non-existant Glasrud; and Iva Shafer, Oakes, these spring evenings, you might stage doesn't have the facilities to horse, but is her apron. Nothing like The fourth regular weekly music N.D., were in St. Paul Tuesday and Wednesday, April 27 and 28, check­ notice several things. It's a three-act adequately house the band choir, having heavy duty clothes. broadcast over KFGO scheduled for ing pro fs of the yearbook. play. I would have said drama but dramatics—and a horse, a substitute Costuming was a problem for a 7:30 p.m., Wednesday, May 3, will you might doubt my statement. Since had to be made. Think of the money 'while. It was rumored that the feature four vocal solos by Imogeue They went over the page proors you must be able to count you'd soon we save in feed alone by having two women would have to go barefoot, Johnson, Moorhead; accompanied by with North Central printers and the - see that there are seven people in the coconut shells on a stone instead of but the additional cost for first aid Bettie Fuller, also of Moorhead. Greene Engraving company. Actual ™ cast. That's probably where they a horse. for broken toes would have been too The selections will include, "Ich printing is now under way. Besides ought to be—in casts. expensive. liebe dic-h" by Grieg, "My Heart at making final checks of the book, the That loud scream of pain is not a Back stage you'd hear noises of Still want to see itf It'll be given Thy Sweet Voice," by Saint-Saens; staff investigated possibilities for the ^ all pitch and tone. That loud swish sound effect. Just one of the set- Wednesday night in Weld auditor­ and "My Prayer." printing of the 1949 DRAGON. is the wind machine—guaranteed to building-crew sawing his finger off. ium. On the April 28 broadcast, Beverly In an interview with the printers, Dailey, Wahpeton, N.D.; Beth Glasrud learned that the 1948 DRA­ Four Fledglings to Become Owls,- Alums Banquet Sehultz, Glyndon; and John John­ GON will be ready for distribution son, Halstad, were heard. about the middle of May. Will Complete Initiation Tomorrow In Graver May 12 One-Day Service Four more fledglings were initi­ The Fargo-Moorhead MSTC Alum­ WOLD DRUG CO. ated into the Owl fraternity with ni ehapter will hold their annual MEET YOUR FRIENDS AT HOME LAUNDRY first degree ceremonies last night, Eia Becomes Kappa spring banquet Wednesday evening, THE FOUNTAIN May 3, after being eggs all of last May 12, at 6:30 in the English Next to Comstock Phone 3-0547 Moorhead, Minn. week. They are Art Miller, Pelican Delta Pi President room of the Hotel Graver, Fargo. Rapids; Chuck Warner, Aitkin; Per­ ry Voldness, Thief River Falls; and Hawley Eia, Shelly, was named Plans for the affair are being made president of Gamma Gamma chapter by Don Anderson, president; Lor­ Ed Magnussen, Dilworth. To the Campus of Kappa Delta Pi at its annual raine Coleman, vice president; and ROBERT B. REIMCHE They, with the fledglings inducted "May morning breakfast", April 28. Helen LeGrand, secretary-treasurer. College Headquarters during the winter quarter, will re­ ceive the second and third degrees to Other officers elected are Duane 618 Center Avenue Anderson, Dragon Terrace, vice pres­ KAY DRUG night and tomorrow night.. Pat Mon- Bluebird Coffee Shop ident; L. H. Steele, secretary-treas­ Dial 3-0412 510 Center A/e. goven, Hankinson, N.D., was elect­ The Store of urer; Miss Jane Johnston, historian; ed cock of the fledglings. and Dr. A. M. Christensen, counselor. Friendly, Personal Norman Carlson, retiring president, Whoa Calling a Cab conducted the installation ceremonies. Service FIRST NATIONAL BANK CALL MOORHEAD MOORHEAD, MINNESOTA CITY CAB Absence Board Acts Member Federal Reserve Syetem Three studeHts have been dropped DRUO COMPANY Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation DIAL 3-1354 from classes because they exceeded the allowed number of absences, Miss The IEXALL Drug Store Jennie Owens, member of the absence ROLLER SKATING board of appeals, revealed today. Quality First at AVALON - EVERT NITE "Many other students are on the verge of being dropped from classes, Except Tues. & Thur. FOR HIGH QUALITY THl having used up all allowed unexeused Sunday afternoon 3 to 5 INSIST UPON absences," Miss Owens added. Monday nite for Beginners

Town and Country Flowers Women's — Misses — Children's Wear DR. C. TILLISCH NORM & MARG OVERBY Dial 3-1555 Moorhead Optometrist - Xyssigbt Specialist Corsages a Specialty Office in Moorhead Theatre Bldg. The Very Latest in College Fashions Dial 3-1325 Retail Stores Located at lYM Examined Glasses Fitted 519 Bdwy. — Dial 4165 — Fargo Dial 3-2058, Moorhead Comstock Hotel Moorhead 13 8 St. So. — Dial 6583 — Fargo 705 Center — Dial 3-1228 —MM. GOOD CLOTHES 14 Toed at Its Bast" SUITS,- COATS - SHOES Colombia Caft MEN and BOYS GOOD CLOTHES I o r ME DtfM MEN and BOYS AA/ALDON'S Every Inch a Clothing Store We Give S & H Green Stamps Frank Kant — Floyd Stottvl tTclothino The Western MiSTiC Pase 5

Spencer Announces Placement of Ruth Hanson Will Visit Writers Sixteen Students Graduating in Spring Norway This Summer Compete Placement of sixteen of the students who will graduate at the end of the spring quarter has been announced by Dr. E. M. Spencer, dir­ A dream which has probably been visualized by almost every MS stu­ ector of the placement bureau. dent is about to eome true for Ruth Hansen, Luverne, MS junior, who By John Toedter All' are two year elementary students except Nathaniel McConachie, will travel to Europe to visit the homeland of her parents this summer. So you think you can ivrite. If Frazee, who will teach industrial arts at Glyndon. Ruth will accompany her mother, Mrs. T. K. Hansen, also of Luverne. you want a chance to prove it, try Beverly Barrett, Lakes, will teach fifth grade at Elbow Lake; They will leave New York harbor aboard the Queen Elizabeth in June. your luck at radio script. The radio Beryl Bailey, Hallock, will teach fourth grade at Ilawley; Shirley For- After docking in England, they will continue to Norway where both of production committee is staging a seth, Detroit Lakes, sixth grade at Elbow Lake; Lorraine Haug, Fair- Ruth's parents were born, and two of her aunts still live. contest, open to all students, in writ­ dale, N.D., sixth grade at Warroad; Rvein Stokkeland, Norwegian transfer student at M8TC, will return ing a skit portraying life on the cam­ Juanita Kahle, Detroit Lakes, sec­ pus in the early 1900's. ond grade at Elbow Lake; Isabell Barnes Named Debate to Norway on the Queen Elizabeth Landby, Swift, fourth grade at War- at this same time. If you don't know anything about road; Lois Laude, Kennedy, sixth Fraternity President Miss Hansen confesses that she life in grandfather's day, ask grand­ grade at Stephen; Clirystal Lind- Dale .Barnes was elected presi­ has always had a hobby of tracing father. Or if he can't help (be­ berg, Karlstad, fourth and fifth dent of Tau Kappa Alpha, nation­ back her family tree, and she be­ cause of death or other inconven­ al Forensies fraternity, at the first lieves that she will be able to con­ ience) you might look at some old grades at Starbuck; Sliirliamae Nel­ annual meeting, Thursday, April 8, nect many of the missing links this newspapers, or get some ideas from son, Moorhead, fifth and sixth grades are Stan Murray, vice president; summer while visiting her parents an early Praeceptor, ancestor of the at Lake Park; June Olerud, Har- Dennis Ottoson, Detroit Lakes, sec- birthplaces. DRAGON. wood, N.D., fifth and sixth grades at 5 p.m. Other officers for 1948 This will be her first trip over You don't have much time, since at. Hendrum; Eileen Olson, Glyn­ retary-treasurer; and Allen Erickson, seas, and also her first look at the the contest closes May 10. Get out don, fourth grade at Wheaton; Dor­ faculty adviser. eastern part of the United States. that old pen now and scratch out the othy Rinke, Dumont, first grade at " I '111 hoping for a few extra days brilliant ideas that have been milling Starbuck; Helen Ruebke, Ada, fifth If it's QUICK SERVICE and \n New York City," she remarked, around in your brain. Here's thp "because I've been through the west chance of a lifetime to show tile through eighth grades at Averill; GOOD FOOD you want— F and south already, and feel that world what you can do. Joanne Svien, Churches Ferry, N.D., It's New York is the one big part of the third grade at Starbuck; and Doris * United States that I've really miss­ Some good skits have shown up Sharel Coffee Nook ed so far." . already. Dr. B. D. Murray'said of Swanson, Red Lake Falls, fifth grade We're closest to the campus. Ruth has been teaching element­ one, "This is really a masterpiece. at Warroad. ary classes in Ortonville and Lu­ The writer will be in Hollywood be­ verne, and in Minnesota rural schools fore long." since graduating from the teacher- BVTH HANSON Entries will be judged by Dr. NORTHWEST BAKERY CO. training division of Crookston high Murray, Dr. Joseph Kise, and John school. She has attended MS summer Cap - Gown Day May 26 Jenkins. The winning script will be BLUE BIRD BAKERY PRODUCTS sessions in the meantime, and is now used ou a program to be given over The traditional Cap and Gown day 704 CENTER AVE. working for her four-year diploma. KVNJ Tuesday, May 25. She is a member of Kappa Delta in honor of the graduating seniors is Pi and Lambda Phi Sigma. set for convocation Wednesday, May 26. STUDENTS! Did you know Dr. Ernest Pederson A skit and musical numbers are SCHERLING'S " being planned by the program com­ Optometrist MARRIED are now in Moorhead? mittee, Marion Haukebo, Under EYES EXAMINED A complete line of Photographic Supplies for the amateur GLASSES FITTED wood, chairman, and Dorothy Jones VETERANS! Your film can be developed only once— DEMAND THE BESi< 702 Center AT., Moorhead, Minn. and Orville Austin, both of Moor­ We still have the lowest Bring your films direct to the finisher for the best results DIAL 3-1624 head. Be sure to see our line of Eastmen Kodaks and supplies. everyday food prices. SCHERLING'S PHOTO SUPPLY For A Richer Smoother Ice Cream ft) No. Fourth St.. Moorhead Ask For L. B. HARTZ If it's from SCHERLING'S it must be good! CASS-CLAY You will like its delicious flavor

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^fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiS- Page 6 The Western MiSTiC Baseball Team ^X^ins Two Tilts; Loses to NDAC 6-5 By Chuck Warner sharp — 17 hits sharp, that is. Cap­ Cobbers . 000 0 10 0- 1 4 6 screen out in deep center, over 400 MAYVILLE GAME feet from liome plate. Drummond The Dragons dropped Mayville 24- £ Baseballs were flying all over the tain Don Corcoran opened the Dragon Dragons 6 4 1 2 5 0 x—18 17 1 half of the first with a single, Mon- popped to third, Melvey walked and 5 mainly because the North Dakota local field hist week as Coach Neil AT NDAC — Alvie Lund drilled out a single to team committed 19 errors. It was the Wohlwend's nine started to open up. goveu singled and Cleanup hitter Max West blasted through a triple fol­ Norm Felde blasted a home run and plate Felde. big third that won this one for the They hung up two victories over a triple but th'at was all the slug­ lowed by Norm Felde's home run. They scored another run in the local athletes as they brought home ~v the week and a one run defeat. ging the Dragons did Saturday over Alvie Lund gave the cash customers fourth on two errors, three stolen 14 runs in this frame. The visitors Tuesday the boys started to hit th« more to cheer about in the first by at AC as they dropped a 6-5 decision did their best to help, too, booting range and blasted four Concordia bases and a wild pitch. dumping another homer over the to Coach Stan Kostka's Bison. For the horsehide 10 times in this inning. hurlers in an 18-1 massacre. They iNdde's homer in the seventh went left field fence. The Dragons had six five innings it looked as if the Dra­ Don Corcoran poled the fourth MS found the home diamond to their lik­ over 450 feet and came close to pull­ runs by the end of the inning. gons were going to make it three homer of the season in the third with ^ ing again Thursday and pounded out ing the game out of the fire. The They picked up four more tallies straight against college competition one on. a 24-5 comedy of errors over the Mav- threat died, however, as George Gor­ in the second, the big blow being a but then three errors, a pair of trip­ John Drury went the first four ville Teachers nine. (They'll probably man fanned Lund and forced Kol­ double by Lund and West got his les and single gave the Bison three innings and had a no hit shutout with ^ ^ suit Doc Lara up for the return ba and Drummond to pop to short. second triple of the day in the third runs and the ball game. two down in the fourth. They picked y game.) for a single run. The Dragons picked up three runs Harry Wilson pitched the first five up one run off him and the rest off • Friday the team traveled over to Pat Mongoven climaxed the day's in the third off AC starter Frank Bis­ innings* for the Dragons, giving up " Wild as Mabel" Jocko Gotta. The AC and the home diamond must have scoring in the fifth by planting one hop. Mongoven opened the frame by three runs and six hits. He struck out Ironwood fastballer walked five, and been too much for thein as they of Cobber pitcher Semingson's high popping out but Johnny Conzeniius five and walked two. Joe Kolba re­ hit one batter but he also pushed dropped a 6-5 contest. hard ones over the center field bar­ got nicked in the wrist for free lieved in the sixth and was tagged third strikes past four batters and with the loss. CONCORDIA GAME — rier with two mates aboard. passage to the initial sack. Max West after a rather shaky start had the The day was warm, the sky was Joe Kolba and Rus Moe were on lashed out a single and then Felde MSTO 0 0 3 10 0 1—5 6 5 Mayville batters eating out of his bright, and the MS batters vfere the hill for the Dragons. bashed out his triple that hit the NDAC 0 0 0 1 2 3 x—6 9 2 hand.

Netmen Split Six • sa Twelve Schools Invited To • Matches With WAA Playday Tomorrow Twelve schools have been invited to Falls; Joan Mikkelson, Oakes, N.D.; Cobbers Thursday participate in the WAA playday to Alice Moore, Hibbing; and Ruby Bunn, Sheldon, N.D. By Chuck Warner be held at MSTC May 5. Registra­ tion will begin at 1:30 in the physi­ Grounds—Rosemary Dodds, Moor­ "Texas Jim" Rich need take rid­ cal education building. head. Entertainment — Mary Ann icule no more. The boy from Long Colmer, Detroit Lakes; Dorothy Beach, with a trunk full of clippings, General chairman of the playday Matthey, Wheatland, N.D.; Margar­ hung up his first win in a college •A is Phyllis Morben, Barnesville. Other et Anderson, Louisberg; and Mary tennis match Thursday as he de­ committees include invitations — Mahoney, Appleton. feated Bud Jensen of Concordia 6-2 JSfU Helen Olson, Pelican Rapids; Bever­ 3-6, 6-1. Jim Rude won from Luther ly Barrett, Detroit. Lakes; Lorna Activities for the day include Hegluud in straight sets, 6-4, 6-2. Hintsala, New York Mills; Norma swimming, softball, volleyball, arch- ^ O VARS'.TY Mi&oalJin Skunes, Grandin, N.D. ery, horseshoes, and relays. Concordia hung up two points in for Yoong M#n the singles events as Don Peterson, Planting—Shelda Jaeobson, Bor- Invitations have been extended to - up; Mary Beth Hagan, Fargo; De­ Hawley, Barnesville, Glyndon, Audu- ' reputed to be the best tennis player 'HEY, KEITH, YOU LOOKED PRETTY GOOD ON THAT ONE" bon, Lake Park, Comstock, Ulen, in fhis area, knocked off Captain laine Redmann, Rothsay; Evelyn Brandli, Warroad; Virginia Trow­ Hitterdal, Moorhead Junior and Sen­ Clayton Lee, 6-1, 6 4. Turner Thomp­ bridge, Comstock; and Bernice Lind- ior high, Dilworth, and Felton. a son took Phil Schwab 6-2, 6-3. gren, Underwood. The two schools split the double Thinclads Cop Second at Registration — Donna Lunder, Drs. F. A. THYSELL matches as Heglund and Peterson Barnesville; Dorothymae Grimes, and defeated the Lee & Rich duo 6-4, 6-8, Graceville; Eva Nelson, Glyndon; Inez Jaekel, Frazee; Gladys Scheer, J W. DUNCAN 6-4 and Here Robinson and Rude de­ Bison Track Meet Saturday Pelican Rapids"; and Doris Jorde, DIAL 3-0232 feated Jensen and Thompson 6-2, 6-1. By Chuck Warner and Keith Woods came in third in Thief River Falls. 624 Center Ave. Moorhead the highs. Paced by Dave Torson and John Finance chairman—Phyllis Filipi, Woods pulled the biggest upset of Conzeniius with two wins apiece, the Angus. Refreshments—Jeanne Hoffa See us for your the day as he tied Johnson of AC in MSTC track team came in second at Detroit Lakes; Pat Briggs, Moor­ the pole vault. Before the meet, the the Bison Invitational Track and head; Betty Leitheiser, Detroit FAVORITE RECORDINGS AC vaulter was figured in a class by Field meet Saturday. It was the first Lakes; Joyce Stadum, Thief River contest of the year for Coach Roy himself when it came to the bamboo Bernie's Record Shoppe Domek's thinclads and they competed lifters. GROSZ with several of their stars absent. Joe Kolba continued to be a pitch­ STUDIOS er this time with a javelin, and his The Northwest's Exclusive Torson picked up firsts in the AlIKO) II! ,1m, larrt^ _ high jump and broad jump be­ toss of 155 feet was good enough Moorhead Record Store sides running on the relay team that for first. John (Otto) King took third. Fine Portraits 61S NP Ave. Dial 8448 copped that event. Conzemius legged D ZSI G NES/ it over the high and low hurdles. Big Otto, the pride of the Fox­ llTMO PLATE flAKEE/ For Everv Occasion Don Corcoran took third in the lows hole, also recorded a third with a NO. DAK. shotput heave of 39' 10". The Iron- wood Atomizer performed in true Olympian style, competing in the NEUB ARTH'S broad jump, high jump, low .hurdles, shot put, discus, and javelin. (Hey Jewelry - Watches - Diamonds Otto, did you sell hot dogs, too?) : The atj Ball la Across tho Strsst Moorhead. Minnesota For S ~~!ing Steaks Chuck School picked up a third in « the 220 yard dash and fourth in the 100 while Don Corcoran came in third in the 100 and Don Harnier fourth Try Visit Our in the 220. Andy Dodds and John Lavely fin­ New Record Dept. ished two and three in the mile run and Stan Murray finished second over REX CAFE Complete Stock of the LATEST and BEST the two mile grind. VICTOR and COLUMBIA Recordings n

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