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2-14-1952 The onM tana Kaimin, February 14, 1952 Associated Students of Montana State University

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Recommended Citation Associated Students of Montana State University, "The onM tana Kaimin, February 14, 1952" (1952). Montana Kaimin, 1898-present. 2771. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/studentnewspaper/2771

This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Associated Students of the University of Montana (ASUM) at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Montana Kaimin, 1898-present by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. oncert Tonight Gonvo To Mark 59th Year MSU Grad WiU Address THE MONTANA Charter Convo Tomorrow BY BILL GALVIN It has been 59 years since MSU was issued a charter by the third Montana legislative assembly on Feb. 17, 1893. Convoca­ tion, tomorrow, will mark this occasion with a special program KAJMIN of music by the VarsityChamber band and by speaker William Montana State University, Missoula, Montana M. Allen ’22, president of Boeing Aircraft company. Volume LIII Z400 Thursday, Feb. 14, 1952 No. 63 Mr. Allen, who w as bom in ------; Lolo, had been legal counsel and company director of Boeing before Craig. The first enrollee in the being elected president in 1945. University was a Hamilton girl, Helen McCrackin, and the only lonight will mark the first of It was a tribute to Allen’s ability AWS Votes to Keep to be given the top spot in a com- courses offered were in mathe­ ;wo Community Concert appear- matics, languages, history, physi­ inces for Yfrah Neaman, violin­ Classes will be arranged as cal sciences, mechanical engineer­ ist, in the Student Union audi­ follows tomorrow: ing, and assaying. torium. Both tonight and tomor­ Miss Montana Franchise 8 o’clock classes—8:10 to 8:45. Structural improvements' to the row night the curtain w ill go up BY BETTY SMITH 9 o’clock classes—8:55 to 9:30. physical plant include 26 perma- it 8:15 p.m. 10 o’clock classes—9:40 to 10:15. Once again the University is keeping the Miss Montana fran­ Charter day exercises—10:30 chise. Funds are scarce, but because it is impossible for the to 12. nterviews Montana Jaycees to help out on a state-wide basis, as the Uni­ 11 o’clock classes cancelled. versity had hoped, the Associated Women students’ board has pany that faced the problems of voted to restrict the election of Miss Montana to a college reconversion to peacetime produc­ tion. The theme of his speech will

W ho Put the Pony McCarthy, Horse, Mountaineer Topics In Mrs. Perham ’s Parlor? THETAS QUESTION HOW neither pig-sty for a home, nor ai Letters . . . FAR FUN SHOULD GO automaton for a head residenl In the mystery of how a horse got in the Sigma Chi and COED RALLIES TO DEFENSE— To the August Members of Inter­ Little respect, it appears, is to b Kappa Alpha Theta parlors, several points are clear: KAIMIN HAS RED INFLUENCE fraternity accorded, either, to personal prop Dear Editor: Gentlemen: (We use the term sa­ erty; the position^ and dignity o (1) a horse definitely was involved, reportedly an incon­ I have been reading with Inter­ tirically) the house mother, or to the genera" siderate hay-burner that answered to the name of Bulova. est the latest controversy in the Come, now, lads, fun is fun, and currently laughable, ideal o (2) someone led the horse into the unfortunate parlors. This Kaimin, re. Senator McCarthy. and jokes are jokes. But, and we human intelligence. Would som After the bitter tirade which fol­ humbly beg that you incline your anonymous members of your fin conclusion was reached when it was discovered that all doors lowed Mr. Kreitzer’s letter, I find shell-like ears toward us in a body had as much mental powe had been closed and latched. Reliable sources say the horse that I can no longer contain my moment of unaccustomed concen­ per square inch as the horse! 1 did not have a pass key. views but must give vent to them tration, presuming that where will, no doubt, always remain via a letter to the editor. there be feeling, there may also sourqe of wonder to those of u (3) those who were involved in the horse stunt must have It seems a great shame to me' be sense, is there not a point at who have not “ye Olde Colleg been under the influence of something other than rationality. that college students must jump which fun ceases and general law­ Spirit” as to why entering sororit After the uninvited guest and his leavings were removed, like a pack of hungry coyotes upon lessness begins?' ’Tis too much to houses is not an infraction of th a man, one of the few, who has presume, perchance? privacy of one’s home, why de an estimate of the damages was made. The joke cooled rather had the intestinal fortitude to The turning over of furniture struction of sorority property i quickly. attack such an odious ideology as may flex those athletic muscles— not on a par with the destructioi Several different parties have accepted, on the sly, the Communism. It shows either a shades fo Charles Atlas!; prowling of any personal property, or wh complete lack of ability to face about like six-year-olds in search intelligence and general sense i dubious credit for a “good” joke but all have denied any asso­ the fact that this country is being of grand adventure may be clever not applicable in life away fror ciation with the stunt when the damages to the furnishings, sold down the river to Joe Stalin and quite like Humphrey Bogart mother and father. amounting to several hundred dollars, are mentioned. by such people as Hiss, Coplin, in one of those big, bad movies The Members of Service, and Jessup, or else it i§ an but, while the paragons of intel­ Kappa Alpha Theta Sororit Sensing this to be the start of more malicious pranks to come, illustration of a desire of college lect are at it, since health and gen­ (The foregoing letter Is writ­ the Kaimin offers this bit of advice which probably will not be students to permit Communism eral willingness to exhaust them­ ten in reference to the horse- taken: “Knock off the horseplay.”—D.W. to get a stronger foothold in this selves in humorous pursuits seems in-the-parlor incident that is country than it already has. Maybe high, why do you not concentrate explained in a news story on it is a shelter complex. on building stables to house- the page 1.—Ed. Need McCarthy animate portions of your pranks? Little Man on Campus by Bibler Just why do we need a man like Unfortunately, sorority houses are McCarthy? First of all, Commun­ singularly stableless. Think of the TAYLOR, EDITOR EXPRESS ism has already obtained such a fun of it all! One could play Hop- VIEWS TO CLEAR (?) THE AIK firm hold on the country that even a-long Cassidy almost all the Dear Editor: a fairly small university such as time. We, on our part, will supply Yes, the air needs a little clear MSU can claim its share in times comic books—graded according to ing, and your diagnosis of Mouir past. Their influence can be shown difficulty—for the pursuit of mat­ taineer ills is accurate and pen in recent Kaimins. Such people as ters other than riding the range ceptive. One particularly tellirr Judith Coplon and Alger Hiss are while noble steeds take their point, however, was the Claus' either already free or will probably needed rest, bedded down on din­ about the “slightly charitable ns1 soon be. Hiss and Coplon have been ing room carpets, quietly munch­ ture of advertising in a literal proven traitors to this country in ing on draperies. As a further in­ magazine.” This is precisely tl? the truest sense of the word. Their ducement, boxes of Kleenex will businessman’s attitude, and ) aim is to work against the United be available at all times to supply should judge that you supports States to the benefit of a foreign the needs of runny nosed heroes. him. Is this attitude defensible power. More than 100,000 casual­ Speaking of noses: ours have be­ I doubt that the word “charity ties to date in Korea. We need come as granite, since we have could be applied anyway, but '1 somebody who can deal with these looked on the face of Medusa once it could, how is support of literal people, someone who isn’t afraid too often. It would, perhaps, be magazines “charity” any more tha of a little unpopularity if it will far better to live in a pig-sty in (please see page four) benefit his country in the long run. order that animals might be suc­ ------i It is indeed unfortunate that in­ cessfully quartered, or to have B stead of defending this man, MSU acquired some kind of an insensi­ students must jump on the anti- ble machine to serve in the capa­ FOR YOUR NEGLECTED \ McCarthy bandwagon with the rest city of house mother. Unfortun­ VALENTINE— f of the herd as it rumbles by. From ately, and quite wrong of us it is, such a reaction it can almost be too, since nobody can have any presumed that if McCarthy said red-blooded fun any more, we have Something Sweet boo about Coplon or Hiss the Kai­ min would immediately come to For Sweethearts the defense of these proven trait­ Only— Carmen Cavallarq ors. Love Your Magic Spell j Now let us look at McCarthy’s - SKI - Is Everywhere i record. You failed to mention that McCarthy accused Robert Service I Love You of communist activities. Service Diamond So In Love has been kicked out. You failed to Sw eetheart of All My Dreams* mention that McCarthy has ac­ Will You Remember cused Phillip Jessup of un- Mountain a ‘Say, Kelly, how’s about a straw for Carolyn’s root beer, huh? Americanism. The senate refused Let Me Call You Sweetheart j to approve his appointment. Mc­ P.S. I Love You * DRAFT DEFERMENT TEST mail it in the special envelope Carthy accused Atcheson of - com­ SATURDAY AND TO BE GIVEN AGAIN provided. Applications must be munist sympathies. Over 50 sena­ SUNDAY Stay As Sweet As You Are j All students who intend to take postm arked by M arch 10, 1952. tors, Democrats and Republicans, the Selective Service College Qual­ signed a petition -to have Acheson Three Tows Hefte's ification Test in 1952 should file removed from office. Yet the applications at once, the Selective bungling haberdasher we have in The Montana the White House, and his white­ Music Shop \ Service Headquarters said yester­ and day. The test will be given April washing friends such as Tydings, “The Music Center” J 24. KAIMIN refused to remove such a poor se­ curity risk. At the time of the start Concession 310 N. Higgins Ph. 411<‘ An application and a bulletin of Established 1898 of McCarthy’s campaign many information may be obtained at I The name Kaimin (pronounced Ki­ senators said he was right, yet any Selective Service local board. rn een) is derived from the original wondered if he would be able to Following instructions in the bul­ Selish Indian word and medqs “some­ thing: written*' or a “message.** stand up under the burning he letin, the student should fill out Published every Tuesday, Wednesday, was sure to get. his application immediately and Thursday, and Friday of the college year by the Associated Students of Montana Senate Convinced State University. Represented for nar Hi, Kids! tional advertising by National Adver­ There you have it. The senate, tising Service, New York, Chicago, Bos­ with a few exceptions, is con­ ton, Los Angeles, San Francisco. En­ Montana’s Oldest tered as second-class m atter at Missoula, vinced McCarthy is right; Wis­ Sickel’s Service -j- High Grade Montana, under Act of Congress, March consin is convinced, and Maryland . Bank 3, 1879. S ubscription r a te $3.00 p er year. is convinced. Too bad that sup­ Texaco Products — Happy M ember, posedly intelligent college stu­ Montana State Press Association dents are incapable of rejecting Motoring for You. FIRST Member, Rocky Mountain the influence of biased democratic Intercollegiate Press Association newspapers and determining for NATIONAL themselves what a crisis we face SICKEL'S TEXACO SERVICE Editor, Dick Wohlgenant; Business Manager, Pat Graham; Associate Edi­ and that McCarthy is a leader East Broadway and Madison BANK tors, Tom Ambrose, Jewel Beck, Bill with the courage to face.it. Jones, Lewis Keim, and Dick Smith; Circulation, Scott Cunningham. This nation needs more, many MISSOULA’S more men of the type of the fight­ INDEPENDENT BANK Printed by thjj^UniverBity Press ing marine! Please God, give us men—not cowards! Cathy Doherty BROWNIES IS OPEN! CAREFUL CARE FOR YOUR CAR WHY ALL THIS FUSS? TIRE TRACTIONIZING Dear Editor: We’re Back to Serve You Service on— Who the hell is McCarthy? MOTOR TUNEUP BRAKES - GENERATORS A steady reader Those Big, Juicy Hamburgers WHEEL BALANCING CARBURETORS T. R. Hewett HEADLIGHT ADJUSTING STARTERS - IGNITION and Creamy Malts and Shakes. Quick, Friendly Service Stop in and FRONT STREET TEXACO See Us, Students Brownies In ’n Out Drive In 144 W est Front Street Phone 7833 Corner Cigar Store 1640 West Broadway Hours 7 a.m. to 1 a.m. lu rsd ay , F e b ru a ry 14, 1952 T H E MONTANA KAIMIN P ag e T h re e

Chi; 2:45, Mel’s Rejects vs. Alpha PEK, SAE Tie I-M Hoop Sked Phi Omega; and 4:00, Theta Chi Iustling Colorado Rams vs. No Names. For Second Place Thursday: 6:30, Jumbo vs. Dea­ cons; 7:45, Phi Delta Theta vs. Alaska, Hawaii, and the West Phi Epsilon Kappa moved into a Strip Houses; and 9:00, Sigma Nu ^lay Grizzlies Saturday tie for second place in League A Needs teachers in all departments. Teaching: salaries up to $4600 and better. with Sigma Alpha Epsilon by beat­ vs. Wesley. Register Now. A y,oung, hustling Colorado A and M basketball team invades ing the Angels 35-27. Mel’s Rejects Saturday: (tentative) 9:30, FREE LIFE MEMBERSHIP [ie MSU gym Saturday night to tangle with Montana’s speedy won their second game by beating Rodeo club vs. Alpha Tau Omega; HUFF TEACHERS AGENCY Corbin hall 40-32 in a Tuesday 10:45, Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. 2120 Gerald Member N.A.T.A. Ph. 6653 Grizzlies. It w ill be the first tim e in history th a t a Colorado night game. Corbin; 1:00, Ski club vs. Sigma 37 Years' Placement Service L and M team has played at Missoula. Hammond was high for PEK The Grizzlies defeated the Aggies on their own floor earlier with nine and Marvin Nelson hit 11 for the Angels. Bob Ruden scor­ i the season by a score of 51 to 54. Since then, the Aggies have ed 13 for the Rejects and Jones >st to Wyoming, 58-45, and to collected 12 for Corbin. •enver, 61-52, while the Grizzlies and sophomore center Bob Sneath Alpha Phi Omega got credit for STOP! Go to the ave lost to Brigham Young, 47-50, have been pushing him for that a League A win although the nd have won from Utah, 63-60. position. Guards Ron Sisson and Junior Varsity swamped them 73- Bill Strannigan, in his second Stan Pivic, forwards Dick Sweit- 25. Johnson hopped 11 for APO. ear as the Aggie coach, has built zer and Hal Kinard, and center hustling hoop squad around the Dennis Steuhm are other sopho­ 93 Stop and Go Drive In nly two returning lettermen, Russ FEMS TO DRAW FOR TOURNEY mores who have been looking Women’s basketball team cap­ Lerucha and Don Scothorn. Both sharp in recent games. Lerucha and Scothorn play for­ tains will draw for places in the Hamburgers, Cheeseburgers, Coffee, Milk, Malts, Shakes The young Aggie hoopsters have elimination basketball tournament ward and are six feet, two inches had an up and down season, win­ ON HIGHWAY 93 SOUTH ill. at 4 p.m. today in the women’s ning only two while losing seven gym. A .number of sophomores in Skyline competition. They have be remainder of the squad. Sopho- lost close games to New Mexico, lore guard Bob Betz has been the 63-64, Utah State, 41-46, Utah, wading Aggie scorer, but Scothorn 54-58, and Montana, 51-54. , Probably the best games the Aggies have played were in their llpha Phi Squad 85 to 60 conquest of New Mexico DAY and their 55 to 43 upset of Utah. HOW MANY TIMES A Dumps New Hall The worst defeat suffered by the Alpha Phi won over New hall Aggies was a 68-47 loss to Brigham To. 2 by 10 points last night in Young at Provo. he last game of the women’s bas- The Colorado A and M quint :etball practice tournament. has scored 493 points in Skyline Maxine Hightower, Missoula, competition, which gives them an cored 19 of Alpha Phi’s 31 points, average of 54 points per game. vhile Camille Johnson, Perma, T heir opponents have scored 512 nade 16 of New hall’s 21 points. points, which means an average of This was the third win out of 56 points per game has been scored ive games for Alpha Phi. against/ the Aggies. Davis Still Leads Grizzlies In Individual Scoring Honors Chuck Davis, Grizzly forward, till leads his nearest teammate by l five-point margin per game for ndividual scoring honors in the PE Loses 51 games the Grizzlies have played. To Journalism Davis has amassed 287 points n 20 games for a 14.35 average per Journalism faculty bowlers con­ jjame. He has scored 101 field goals tinued to set the pace in weekly md 85 free throws. In second spot s sophomore guard Eddie Ander- league play as they dumped the son w ith a 9.1 average per game. Physical Education squad three 50? H 100? H 200? Anderson has scored 74 field goals games. and 42 free throws for a total of Second place Business Adminis­ 190 points. He has played in 21 tration, three games behind the game?. Third in Grizzly scoring is vet­ league leaders, continued in hot eran fprward Bob Sparks with 177 pursuit, taking three games from IF YOU’RE AN AVERAGE SMOKER points in 21 games for a 8.4 aver­ the Liberal Arts five. Military Sci­ age per game. He has tossed 60 ence, in third place, kept the pace from the field and made 57 at the with three wins over the Humani­ THE RIGHT ANSWER IS OVER 2 0 0 ! free throw line. Capt. Hal Sher- beck is fourth with a 7.1 average ties squad. Fifth place Botany- per game in 21 games. He has Chemistry took two of three games hooped 59 field goals and 32 free from the Administration team. Yes, 200 times every day tosses. Standings: W ■ L Although Jack Luckman has Journalism ______36 15 your nose and throat are missed five games, he is still fifth Business Administration ..__33 18 in scoring. Luckman has 30 field Military Science ______- 30 21 exposed to irritation • • • goals and 45 free throws for a total Administration _ ...... 25 26 of 105 points and a 6.5 average per Botany-Chemistry ______24 27 game. Luckman|s replacement, Physical Education ______-_20 31 200 GOOD REASONS WHY Dale Johnson, is sixth with a 5.7 Liberal Arts — .. ___ . . 18 33 average per game. He has 46 field H um anities 17 34 YOU'RE BETTER OFF SMOKING goals and 27 free throws for 119 High team series for the eve­ points. He has played in all 21 ning went to the Business Admin­ games. istration squad with a three-game Philip Morris! . As a team, the Grizzlies have total of 2,465. Military Science had hooped 449 field goals and 355 free high team game with 863. High in­ throw s for 1,257 points and an dividual game honors went to PROVED definitely milder . . . PROVED average of 59.7 per game. Grizzly John Stewart of the Botany- definitely less irritating than any other opponents have scored 493 field C hem istry squad Arith a 223 game. goals and 358 free throw s for High individual series went to leading brand . . . PROVED by outstanding 1,347 points and a 64.1 game aver­ Business Administration team nose and throat specialists. age. The Grizzlies have won nine m em ber Edw in D w yer w ith a 576 and lost 12. series.

A Valentine Treat = X T R A / ATTENTION ALL COLLEGE STUDENTS That Can’t Be Beat Every Sunday Evening over CBS t h e PHILIP MORRIS PLAYHOUSE A BASKETBURGER Presents an Outstanding College Student At The Featured with Famous Hollywood Stars m PHILIP MORRIS Intercollegiate Acting Competition FAIRWAY DRIVE IN (On Highway 93 South) Ijst&L"* STEAKS - CHICKEN - SANDWICHES - BEER CALL Don’t Drive By—Drive In! FOR P age F o u r THE MONTANA KA1HIN T h ursday, F e b ru a ry 14, 19^ Letters to E ditor.. • (continued from page two) Toni Matt, Famous Skier, Statistics Reveal Key Services support of yearbooks or booster clubs? Library Offers MSXJ Students One other point. What is this pining after a “solid literary di­ Will Instruct Ski Classes Statistics do not tell the whole the stacks by requesting that gest?” Condensed freshman story of the University library’s stack permit be issued to them. Toni Matt, internationally fam­ area so well that he settled there potential usefulness to the MSU The statistics show in a measui themes? Rejects from “Reader’s ous skier from Whitefish, will ac­ and established the Toni Matt Ski Digest?” Surely you can’t mean campus. They do reveal, however, the extent to which the library i company the physical training ski school at Big Mountain, near the key role that the library plays used. it. But it is the first positive pro­ classes to Diamond Mountain Fri­ Whitefish. gram to come forward for years in providing assistance in refer­ They do not reveal the effoi day afternoon. Matt will visit the Matt laid out the Langley Rim ence questions, making books, made by the library staff to pro to change the magazine. Physical Education department which was used in two national A note to Mr. Enseling: the high documents, and pamphlet mater- vide the study materials require first and then leave for the ski championship meets on Big Moun­ rials available for assigned read­ when and where they are neede quality of programs is often con­ course where he will assist the ski tain. The splintered and mended firmed rather than denied by the ings, lending bound and unbound with the most efficient service tha instructor. ax he used is on display in the Big _ periodicals, and meeting the needs the library staff can render. fact that few attend them. This Matt became junior champion of Mountain ski lodge. situation is not confined to Mis­ of general reading. Austria at the age of 15. Since then In providing service, the circu­ soula. The examples of Steffe and he has added a long list of ski Shaw this year should prove that lation department is responsible Changing Weathei championships. In 1939 he broke Masquers Initiate for three general types of material. even an artist must make himself the record in half for the schuss a clown to appeal to any mass. In the Reserved Book Reading down Tuckerman’s ravine on Seven Neophytes Room, 118-119, are books which Brings Infirmary Robert T. Taylor Mount Washington. A schuss is a (I, too, doubt that support of are in the greatest demand for literary magazines by advertis­ straight down swoop on skis. In Montana Masquers initiated course work. The student has the Many Illnesses 1941 he became United States na­ seven members yesterday. Mem­ privilege of checking them out for ing is any more charitable than With damp spring weather com the support of yearbooks or tional winner for the downhill run. bership in the drama honorary, a two-hour period or over a closed Matt received his ski education ing on the student health cente booster clubs. The three are, by according to president Art Lundell, period. During the fall quarter, in Hannes Schneider’s ski school books in this category were is a busy place. An even 100 stu their nature, in the same group. is awarded to those who have dents were treated on Monda; Their support can often be at St. Antone am Arlberg, Austria. charged to individual students 'After Hitler invaded Austria, Matt earned points for work with cam­ 2,948 times. alone and this is not considerei termed charitable if this defini­ an unusually busy day, accordini tion is accepted: charitable—to and Schneider came to the United pus drama productions. States and taught skiing at North Bug Science Reading Heavy to Mrs. Robert De Zur, head nurs be liberal in the judging of The new members are Beverly of the center. others; disposed to look on the Conway, N. H. In 1941 Matt got Books that are used for required Praetz, Chinook; Donna Mithun, readings in the biological sciences A large number of minor cold best side and to avoid harsh his first American citizenship pa­ Missoula; Alice Anne Buis, Mis­ pers. are also kept in the Reserved Book or influenza cases were reportei judgment. soula; Pat Koob, Bozeman; Allan Reading Room. The books in this among the various illnesses beinj (When a merchant advertises in As a second lieutenant during Rose, Malta; Virginia Gripple, the Mountaineer (or a yearbook), the war, Matt taught skiing to classification w ere loaned out 4,448 treated. Dr. M. P. Wright advisei Havre; and Tom Kilpatrick, Lau­ times during the fall quarter. The that students should not rusl he may consider only that a cer­ mountain troops at Camp Hale, rel. tain number of copies will be Colo., and in the Aleutian Islands, total circulation for two-hour re­ spring too much as it is the mos printed. He may remember that Alaska. serve books and survey books was popular season for contracting res­ Following his discharge in 1946, FILMS WJLL BE SHOWN 7,396, or an average of 28 books piratory infections. as a merchant who gains much of AT CHEMISTRY CLUB MEET his livelihood from the university Matt taught for another year on for every hour the Reserved Read­ Seven persons were recently ad­ community, it is not unwise for Hannes Schneider’s staff and for a Two moving pictures will be ing Room was open. Students have mitted to the student infirmary fo: him to help support a worthwhile year at Sim Valley. In 1948, he and shown at the Chemistry club meet­ access to these books 58% hours a influenza treatment. Also enterec community offering. And how bet­ his wife, the former Stella LoPresti ing tonight at 7:30 in the chemis­ week which time includes four were appendicitis, anemia, dental ter to do that than by an advertise­ of Arlington, Mass., went to White- try-pharmacy building. The films nights a week; 7-10 p.m., Monday and strained ligament cases. N< ment for his enterprise? fish, where the Big 'Mountain ski are “Men, Metals, and Machines” through Thursday. ski injuries were reported by th< (He, if his advertising is of development was in its second and “Amazing Molecules of Gaso­ The Reading Room provides a service for the past two weeks. a charitable nature, will avoid year. Matt liked the Whitefish line.” quiet place for students to study. making the harsh judgment of Since the beginning of the fall how thoroughly the magazine r quarter, a selected list of period­ will be distributed or read; the icals from 1945 to the present that Student Union degree of interest on the part of Bears and Cowboys of Montana are in great demand is available the reader; the secondary read­ for student use. Students may go Schedule ership; the life of the magazine; Disillusion Student from Austria directly to the shelf to obtain a or other considerations. reference in lieu of the older, Bitterroot room,' 12 to 1, Store (The use of the word “digest” BY CARLA WETZSTEON the same. I wondered if Americans slower process of writing out a board; 7 to 8, Christian Science does not carry with it the conclu­ would be different. America is so call slip, presenting it to the assist­ organization. “When I heard I was coming to far from Europe that I thought dis­ sions you reached, that is, a maga­ ant at the circulation desk, and Eloise Knowles room, 12. to 1 Montana, the first thing I thought tance would make a difference. waiting for the page to bring it to zine composed of “condensed fresh­ of were grizzly bears and cowboys. However, I discovered that aside Cogswell luncheon; 5 to 6, Uni tec man themes” or “rejects from I’ve only seen Grizzlies on the him. This system has not only Christian fellowship. from little differences, Americans saved countless hours of student Reader’s Digest.” Surely the edi­ football field and I haven’t seen Makeup room, 3 to 4, Studenl tor of a Mountaineer makes some and Europeans are fundamentally time but also has saved hours of any cowboys,” said Ingeborg Woll- the same.” Religious council. sort of selection from material merstorfer, a student from Austria. library assistants’ time. turned in to him. If he has good When she heard of Montana, The attendance for the fall quar­ Central Board room, 3 to 4, Tra­ Miss Wollmerstorfer is studying Miss Wollmerstorfer did not know ter during the 61 % hours a week ditions board; 5 to 6, Spurs. substance from which to make a for a master’s degree in political what to expect. “I thought that my choice, the result will be a credit- the Reading Room was open was Gold room, 7 to 9, square dance economics. She said that many contacts with the people would 23,379 or 12 tim es as great as the abel digest of literary efforts made people ask why she is interested in on campus.—Ed.) turn out to be more successful than University. such a “dry” subject. Her reply is my studies but I have found that Many Loaned Fall Quarter Classified A ds... that economic conditions cause each shares equal importance. FOR SALE: *41 Chev. Sedan. 933 S o uth KXLL HUNTS TALENT FOR many of the crises in the world to­ “Contact with Americans has In general, those books which 1st West. Phone 2030. 64c COMING TV DEMONSTRATION day and therefore she wants to convinced me that class conscious­ are charged out for a two-week WANTED: People to attend the Phi Chi Students interested in partici­ know all she can about the subject. ness is at a minimum in America,” period are loaned out from the Theta card party. 3-5 Friday. Copper pating in the KXLL Television “I am also taking such a course Miss Wollmerstorfer said. "I no­ circulation desk. For the three- room. Admission 25c. 64c demonstration should see or call so that I can enter the foreign serv­ ticed that as long as a person works month period from October 1 to KAIMIN WANT ADS PAY Pat Goodover, manager of radio ice when I return to Austria,” said hard at an honest job he is a re­ December 22, there w ere 7,149 station KXLL. Miss Wollmerstorfer, “since I was a spected member of the commun­ books charged out. Of this number, The station is looking for persons child I have been interested in ity. That is not always true in my 17 had not been returned at the with talent as vocalists, instru­ foreign people. I visited France, country.” beginning of winter quarter. mentalists, comedians, or any type Italy, Germany, and Switzerland. Miss Wollmerstorfer remarked There w ere 205 graduate stu­ P retty of act or ensemble consisting of In these countries, although lan­ that everyone in this country has dents registered during the fall no more than eight individuals, to guage and customs were different, been especially friendly toward quarter. Of this number, 60 took As a appear in the demonstration. I found the people were basically her. “I like to interpret this hos­ advantage of the privilege of using pitality as a sign that Americans are interested in Austria,” she Picture said. For Your . . . The only thing Miss Wollmer­ ... in your nylon blouse storfer misses from Austria is the with neat tucks and opera and the Viennese philhar­ PARTIES or PICNICS monic orchestra. “I also miss hik­ pert ruffles. ing,” she said. “I can get people . Be Sure to Order here who will go for a ride but few who will go for a hike.” Miss W ollmerstorf er said she considers it a duty to return to Austria and tell her countrymen who are not able to come to the United States what America' is really like. 1949 Mercury 4-Door We Can Also Supply You w ith Overdrive, Radio, Heater 1949 Ford 4-Door Mission Orange Custom 8, O.D., Radio, H eater Made from Real Oranges 1949 Ford Coupe Radio, Heater Mission 1948 Pontiac 2-Door Lem onade Radio, Heater Made from Real Lemons See Cummins new 1947 Ford 4-Door Root Beer, Royal Grape Punch, selection in pastels and Radio, Heater AT THE Cherry, Creme Soda, Straw­ w hite. Priced from berry, and Ginger Ale $3.98. LIBERTY BAKKE MOTOR CO. Phone 3352 Cummins 345 West Front Bowling Center COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. Lincoln MERCURY of Missoula Store for Women