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BUSCHPIS OF COURSE AFTER THE P.L. Friday,-I Sept. 23—Bonfire rally. Monday, Sept. 26— Thursday, Sept. 29—Film Societ, Saturday, Sept. 24—CPS vs PLC, 8 Tuesday, Sept. 27—Kappa Phi "Rose "Die Fledermaus." 730 p.m.. Jones p.m., Lincoln Bowl. Tea," 4 p.m., home of Dr. and Mrs. Hall Auditorium. Womens Faculty Club tea, 2 p.m., R. Franklin, 620 North J. Women's College League, 2 p.m., Anderson hall. Wednesday, Sept. 28— Anderson Hall. t\ College of Puget Sound Friday, September 23, 1949 Tacoma, Washington

Coach Heinrick was on the campus in the week in order to facilitate early, along with the beef trust. By freshman orientation, were given CAMPUS WEEK the time school started, the athletes time each day in which to rehearse had learned quite a few lessons and perfect their individual offerings. The rains came and so did the about blocking and tackling in prep- Outstanding among the stunts were students. The lawns turned greener. aration for the big King's-X opener a whimsical dramatization, com- Freshmen wandered around with with the Lutherans tomorrow. The plete with elephant, of the childhood that "What happens now?" look. game will also be a big occasion for They tried not to look self-con- the band, which will reveal its new scious—and got lost. uniforms in the pre-game cere- Like a ghost town after someone monies. But the main interest centered on suddenly found more gold in the old the freshmen. It was their week. diggings, the campus suddenly was Rushees were feted with picnics and alive with people, noisy students, lunches by the fraternities and so- pensive faculty (you'd never guess rorities. Enthusiastic frosh put on the they were the ones getting paid for annual stunts with unusual gusto, it), and odd characters who might be and Jim Ernst's well-directed group either student or faculty. Number Five wowed the suckers poem "Horton Hatches the Egg," and Old students shook hands with with "Wild Nell, Pet of the Plains." a colorful saga of old Mexico, in- friends they hadn't seen all summer Male upperclassmen were heard to cluding toreadors, senoritas and —or since August if they were other bits of Spanish bric-a-brac, remark about the co-eds: "Mighty pumping the GI Bill for all possible. entitled, "A Steak Is Born." nice crop this year." And even the They stood in the lines leading to Capable direction by a corps of distaff sophomores seemed to agree. Registrar, Dean, Bursar and Book- students from the speech and dra- store. matics department succeeded in jar- The procedure was different, of ring loose the latent talents of the course. It always is. Dick Smith college newcomers and caused careful confided to the faculty meeting that deliberation by judges Mrs. Bernice "one of our oldest traditions is that Riehl, Professor MacMillan, Miss we never register the same way Duke, Dean Powell and Dick Smith. twice." And, Smith added, when he First place honors went to group V for their revival of the Old West asked the Dean if he wanted to say % (L with their skit, "Wild Nell of the a few words about the new pro- Plains." Runner-up position was ac- cedure, Dr. Regester said, "Frankly, Frosh Stunts... corded Group IV who was responsi- I'm not sure I know about it my- Culminating a week of welcomes, ble for the dramatic payment of the self." well-wishes and matriculation, of mortgage in the melodramatic "No! Nevertheless, things were smooth- registering and rushing, both Greek No! A Thousand Times No!" er. Pre-registration of upperclass- and otherwise, the frosh, still square- First class confusion in a railroad men speeded things up. The Regis- ly confused and very damp behind station, and one of the fables of trar's office had processed 1100 cards the ears, presented an evening of Aesop provided the themes for other before the official mad-house got carefully-planned skits in the 25th skits presented by the frosh. under way. A frosh was heard to presentation of Freshman S t u n t Interspersed with the group nuin- complam "They do it better at Sta- Night. The program, held on the bers were specialty acts, which fur- dium." But they also were doing it evening of Friday, September 16, in ther exploited the diversity of this better than last year, when students Jones Hall auditorium, was open to year's freshman. A drum solo, "St. were found in the attic of Jones, the general public. Louis Blue," by Kenny Keane and waiting for the registration to begin The skits, six in number, were en- a fiery Spanish piano solo by Charlie in the Alumni office, basement of acted by student groups of about 20 Lewis highlighted this portion of the Jones. each. The groups, established earlier program.

3 temity brothers, but pity the fact mond, Durham, Raleigh, Chapel Hill, that all fraternities do not have so- Winston Salem, Cincinatti, Peru, M. STUDENTS rority sisters! (Keutzer's birthplace), Omaha, Hast- With rush week over, caine the ings, Denver, Salt Lake City, Boise, let-down. Everyone was segregated Portland and the home concert on Feminine Persuasion... by different-colored ribbons and on May 11. Freshmen girls entered Jones Hall, Wednesday evening the sororities Director Keutzer says "by using a September 12th, to face a table full welcomed the pledges to their first choir of only 40 singers, we get great of snooth-looking girls, each decked meeting. Pledge duties, apparent on flexibility and quality. It is a vir- out with a Sorority pin and eager to the campus this week, were ex- tuoso choir, not one of volume. We sign the girls up for rush. plained to the unsuspecting fledg- are also unique in that we sing both lings. The fee was $2 and there was sacred and folk music." nothing to lose for the price. You The music faculty will select the were taken on a tour of north end Up, and Up and Up ones to make the trip. Adelphians homes for Split-date teas, introduced will hold intensive rehearsals, four to hundreds of girls you tried to re- The lid is off of the story about per day. They are planning benefit member, served tea, and given an the National Adelphian tour. The shows to help defray costs on the idea of what rush was like. trip isn't until March, but every trip. Part of the tuition from Adel- After the tea "hash parties" de- Adelphian is talking in a raised phians who register next spring will cided which girls were to be invited whisper and making plans for the also-be used. back. Tuesday morning of rush week spring semester. the girls mounted the stairs of The forty students making the trip Rushing Deal. Kittredge to receive an envelope will live and travel in a Milwaukee with future invitations. The Dean of The process of getting into a fra- ternity was almost as complex as Women's office was packed. Fresh- - L) men girls came to Dean Drushel, getting into college itself for the veteran of past rush weeks, to hand freshman. The green beanie boys in formal replies accepting invita- were rushed by all fraternities from tions. Parties continued, by Thurs- September 12 to 21, and each frat day both girl rushees and sororities tried to outdo the other in the "We're had made up their minds about pref- good fellows" department. erence. Sororities spent hours choos- To begin with, each rushee had to ing girls they wanted for future so- foot a $1.00 tariffi before he was rority sisters. chartered train. The climax of the given the organized come-on. Then Rushees could attend only two tour is the Town Hall performance he made the rounds of all the houses, "preference" get-togethers out of in New York City on Friday, April played ping-pong, shot pool, ate, four being given. After "preference" 13. The Town Hall debut features drank cokes and shook hands. After each sorority had a list of the girls a world premier of works by Leroy getting his dollar's worth and then they wanted. Part of the final deci- Ostransky, CPS instructor, and Man- some, Joe Rushee got one or more sion rested with the girl herself. She uel Rosenthal, last year's composer- invitations to shindigs called pref- listed a first and second choice and in-residence. erence banquets. Then he decided turned it into Dean Drushel's office. Shows will be given at Spokane, which fraternity he liked the most A faculty committee consisting of Missoula, Aberdeen and Milbank, and attended their banquet, where sorority advisers and Dean Drushel S. D., Minneapolis, Chicago (for the pressure was put on by Rushee had the job of matching sorority three days), Cleveland, New York and fraternity to make the final good preference lists with the rushee's (five days), Washington, D. C., Rich- impression. This preference banquet preference. If a girl's first choice was matched with that sorority's list of preferred girls, she was in. If the first choice didn't match, the second choice was used. If it matched the girl was pledged to that organiza- tion. After waiting from Saturday night to Monday afternoon the president of each sorority received the list of pledges to that group from Dean Drushel and her match-makers. Each list was one of girl rushee pref- erences and sorority preferences that had clicked. All that remained was to pin the pledge ribbon on. From Lakewood to the bay, from east to west the Greek girls rode to the nervous, nail-chewing girls who hoped to affiliate with some Greek chapter. Mainly the one of their first choice. Members got lost, with no nails left some girls went to bed wondering "What Hod Hoppened?" Members finally found their pledges, either sang to them or had them kissed by a brother fraternity inem- ber or both. All sororities have fra- Adelphian Planners was not a bid to join the fraternity, after the feed the members went back to their houses and decided which rushees they really wanted. Yesterday the real bids came out. The boys are in, they examined the bid to see that there was no fine print, signed it, and turned it into Dr. Powell's office today at one o'clock. The IFC put their finger on the fraternities with rules such as: no drinking during rushing, no females to entice the newcomers, no pledging to rushees Who are in the red with any fraternity, and no frat could put out more than $200 during the whole rush period. That's what the rules said.

Help Wanted Ed Balarezo isn't sure how it hap- pened. All he knows is that he ac- cepted the job as editor of the year- book during his lunch hour one day this summer. He had received a let- ter from Nancy Rhiel, AWS secre- tory, asking if he wanted a job. He met AWS President Bill Stivers on a downtown street and agreed. Editor Balarezo is also looking for talent. A n y would-be yearbook workers are asked to sign up in the publications office after 2 p.m. on SAY, t)O YOU KtJOW WI4ERE TEY KEEP Monday, Wednesday, or Friday. -r-He 13AMOA10S ? The first meeting for those inter- ested is set for Friday, September 30 at 3 p.m. in the publications office. Dean Raymond Powell, Pres. R. the sorority at the New Yorker for Franklin Thompson, Dr. John Phil- a hamburger party. Campus Kaltenborns... lips and William Foran. Foran is the The new pledges of Alpha Beta dorm proctor. Upsilon were given their pledge rib- Campus pundits who told Tacoma Last year's president, John Samp- bons and then kissed by a Sigma what's what over the FM station son, led an open discussion on what Nu member. The Pi Phi pledges KTNT last year are at it again Mon- brings a person to college, what he were also welcomed in a similar day as the weekly program "What should expect to find there, and how manner by Kappa Sig members. do you'think?" hits the air at 7:30. to get what he expects. The Lambda pledges were given The first discussion will be on the their orange and silver ribbons to devaluation of the pound. denote their pledgeship also. The Those interested in getting on the Kappa Phi Caper box-score: air with their views should turn Chi chapter of Kappa Phi, national GAMMA - Genie Baic, Nancy their names in at the forensic de- Methodist Women's club, is sponsor- Bartles, Jeanne Berry, Suzanne Ber- partment—in other words in Doe ing a Rose Tea for all women of yin, Bernadine Budil, Joan Camp- Battin's office, second floor, Jones Methodist preference on the campus bell, Barbara Di lulfo, Katherine Hall. Panels of speakers will be on Tuesday, at the home of Dr. and Falskow, Marilyn Gussy, Kay Kloph- drawn from the names submitted. Mrs. R. Franklin Thompson, 620 enstein, Ruby McIntosh, Jane McIn- There are no program rehearsals. North Jay. tire, Dixie Newell, Dorothy Ness, Discussion is entirely spontaneous, Beverly Norlin, Dona O'Dell, Lois and is based on information in cur- Marleen Lutz, vice-president, is general chairman of the 4 o'clock Powell, JoAnne Ryan, Sally Wailer, rent newspapers and periodicals. event. Girls will be welcomed by and Margaret Ward. Those talking Monday will be President Patty Voshmik. Dress will BETA - Mary Lucy Bragg, Joan Philip Anselone, Art Barnes, Bill be school clothes. Brosoit, Mary Lee Cozart, Janet Kidd and Ken Scroggin. Alex Mor- Erickson, Roberta Flannigan, Liz tellaro will get in a few words as Flemming, Beverly Fox, Roberta moderator. Distaff Greeks... Gilmore, Dolores Hankins, Sharon Oriented Frosh Bids were extended in the tradi- Hensley, Barbara Hill, Janet Hunt, tion of each sorority to 74 pledges Shenora Kirishian, Carol Leslie, The recreation room in the boys' as rush-week came to a close Mon- Gloria Leveilie, Joanne Lowry, Mar- dorm is the place on campus to day evening. jorie Lutz, Mary Mahoney, Beverly orient froth males and introduce The members of Delta Alpha Muir, Gayle Peterson, and Joan them to college life. All the high Gamma arrived at the home of each Stenson. brass was at Monday's meeting. John new pledge, sang the Gamma song P1 PHI - Edna Andahl, Sally Ber- Tuttle, dorm president, introduced and then joined the remainder of tucci, Joyce Chishohn, Jane Cres- well, Maureen Dessen, Laura Eli ison, printer, Empress Lithographers at Barbara Gustafson, Hildred Jensen, 9th and Fawcett—a long trudge up Gloria May, Rosemary Martinson, Jo hill from the college bus stop on Ann Neff, Rosemary Seamon, An- Pacific. toinette Sule, Barbara Braitlwaite, There are some new faces on the Mary Hjort, Marilyn Ruchty, Jo-. business manager stat!. Gail Hilstead Anne Wood, Hazel Mika, Joyce Wi!- Here We Go... has taken over the duties of keep- fley, Joan Thompson, and Marilyn ing our creditors happy, and keep- You have to start somewhere. You Jacobson. ing black ink in his pen at the same run around like mad—no one is time. Lois Wasmund as news editor LAMBDA - Helen Hanson, Bar- settled—nothing runs smoothly- will slowly be drive insane in her bara Jugovich, Frances Krffich, you can't find anyone—you've got a attempt to corner the story and a Betty Max, Nelda Smith, Marilyn first edition—contacts to make—line reporter to cover the story. Grant Shell, Coral Stewart, Ann Thomp- is a mile long at the office door of Barker is still with us, this year as son, Rosalie Vickers, Lois Wedeberg, the professor you want to get a story art editor. The opinion page is back Joanne Nicola, and Pat Novak. from—you spend a nice quiet after- with Phil Anselone and Alex Mor- noon heckling your objective by tellaro doing the writing. Formally, telephone in order to interrupt his there will be no society editor. So.- quiet afternoon—you forget appoint- ciety will be covered as student ac- ) ments—you get disgusted—you dis-. tivities. And as soon as we find out, / cuss and cuss the deadline—copy is we'll let you know who the sports finished—layout is set—paperfinally editor is. Delta Kaps Install comes out - late as usual. You The same rule holds for letters as New officers of Delta Kappa Phi bravely ask a bright looking char- always. They must be signed, though were installed at Monday night's acter what he thinks of the paper. the signature will be omitted in the meeting. Ed Lane is president, Ron "What paper?" paper if requested. "The Trail, of course." Stenger, 1st vice-president, Harry We'll try our best, but it's better Edmundson, 2nd vice-president, Hal "Oh—never read it." when both of us help. Get your Simonson, recording secretary, Bob "Ugh." news of activities to a reporter be- Wolf, corresponding secretary, Why, just look at what the guy fore the deadline, which is Tuesday Berndt Oldson, historian, and Bob misses. He walks around in perfect by the way. No sob stories on "1 Allen, sgt. at arms. Jim Ernst is IFC ignorance of all the dirt we dig up wasn't sure when the deadline was, representative. Howie Walters is each week. Stop in at the Trail so I waited as long as possible before pledge father. Bruce Brooks was office and you'll find out what we finding out." chosen as chairman of the DK mean. The Trail is a student training Homecoming committee. This year, the Trail is coming out ground like most other college ac- in a new format. We've changed to tivities and there is bound to be one, Under the leadership of the new an eight-by-ten inch offset news if we're lucky, of you whose namo presideist, Howard Martin, the Axe- magazine. Following in the old Trail we'll succeed in misspelling all year. men will meet on the first and third tradition, however, we have a new We did it to John H. one year. Mondays at noon in the SUB lounge. New officers besides Martin are Harvey De Carteret, vice-president; - Earl Birnel, secretary; Milt Heg- strom, treasurer; Dick Hermsen, sergeant-at-arms. The Varsity Ball is planned for early December.

EDITOR------Nadine Kensler BUS. MANAGER - Gale Hilstad COPY EDITOR - Lois Wasmund ART EDITOR------Grant Barker SENIOR EDITOR - Jack Raphael

Established September 25, 1922 Published Weekly During School Year ft N Official Publication of the Associated Students, College of Puget Sound 1949 - 1950 Ecot rd as eeond elsa mat icr at the Past 05cc in Taeom.,. IVahingi on, under the Act of Congress nt Mn reIn 3 1879. Subscript ion price 7 5c per semester; $100 WEI 3u 5T rOT (-ii' -IT ucEfl/ P2JWES per school year by mail. -01iu SM?LY DIVINE!' group of people I have seen before language is taught in grade school? PEOPLE (I don't remember who or where). What language Is spoke in the 'While I talk they grin and smile, American home? Senator Cain then when I tell them to write a should hear of this." simple exercise they hustle about Like Mother, Like Son sharpening pencils, snapping note- Mrs. Emily Schweinler is one books, discarding paper, wiggling mother who won't send Sonny off to and squirming, and frowning. After school. She enrolled as a frosh and five minutes I rise from my desk to she'll go with him. observe their individual efforts Being collegiate is nothing new to (General methods . . . 152). The her. Two of her children have grad- frowning becomes so intense they uated from college and one is a sen- resemble a bunch of chimpanzees, ior at the University of Washington. and once again the paper is dis- Mrs. Schweinler is realizing a life- carded and the pencils are sharp- long dream by being at the College. ened. Naturally the papers are blank. She is taking courses in home eco- "I go back to my desk, face the nomics and business administration. blackboard and draw big pictures. Son David comes to CPS by way The students are now smiling. What of a scholarship. While at Stadium are they smiling at? Do you know? I wonder if Dr. Powell knows. What ENTERTAI NMENT

Hardy Souls, Caloused field. Other shorts include an ab- stract ballet, a history of dancing In Seats the films (with sequences showing Every Thursday evening last Rudolph Valentino, Anna Paviova, spring two hundred otherwise sen- Vernon and Irene Castle), and a his- sible. citizens subjected themselves tory of film cartooning. to two hours on the Jones Hall The program: auditorium seats, Voluntarily. In September 29—Joie Do Vivre, Die fact, they paid two bucks for the Fledermaus (German). privilege. October 6-0pera in Film, Gener- High School, he was president of the These hardy masochists were als Without Buttons (French). student body, was active in athletics, members of the CPS Film Society October 13—, Camille especially swimming, and received and their purpose was to look at (Garbo). the Richard Graff character award. movies of a type seldom shown in October 20—History of Animation, the commercial theatre: foreign Ivan the Terrible (Russian). Miles Putnam, last year's Trail ed- films, art films, documentaries. October 27—Ballet Mecanique, itor, want to England to take a They'll be at it again this year. Time in the Sun (Mexican). course at Cambridge, and while Tickets are now on sale at the book November 3—Dancing in the abroad had his appendix plucked- store for the Film Society's first Films, The Eternal Mask (Swiss). all expenses paid by His Majesty's series of the new semester. Two socialist government. dollars for six shows, each show to Blackface... Cadaverous Bill Sullivan - the start at 7:30 p. m. Since last spring the higher stu- Hugh Tudor of 1960?—is teaching The features include a German journalism at Port Townsend. dent brass of the Varsity Show have musical, a French comedy, a Garbo been foregathering with John O'Con- drama, a Soviet paen to a dead Czar, Vernon M. Svenssen, the individu- nor and kicking around ideas for a a Mexican decunientary, and a Swiss alistic string-bean who left college theme. suddenly la$ spring to enroll in a psychological killer-diller. The for- The show, two years a Jones Hall photography school in Connecticut, eign films have English sub-titles. fixture, will probably be staged in arrived to find his credits in a VA Among the shorts accompanying the Field House this year. So, for a snarl and no dough forthcoming. the features is Man of Aran, a docu- time, all the plans were on a grand- mentary by Robert Flaherty, gener- He's serving a three year hitch in iose scale: dream sequences, chariot the army. Sic transit gloria.. ally considered to be the best in the races, donkey baseball in the second act (a theme that was dinged be- cause of the post-show broom-and- English Spoke Here... dustpan requirements) and even a Here's a progress report from one Roman circus, complete with slaves of CPS's recently fledged English and maybe even Christian maidens. But after a summer of simmering teachers, now splitting infinitives in the hinterland: it was decided that size wasn't everything. And with a mind to what "I have been an English teacher worked well in the past, the com- for some two weeks, and at this mittee decided to do a repeat on the writing I am still ahead of the class. Minstrel Show which highlighted the My biggest headache is a group of 1947 Homecoming. assorted morons who are trying to The show will go on Wednesday distinguish between a subject and a and Thursday, November 16th and predicate. They are typical of some 17th. Tryouts were held this week. The presidents of the institution have been: F. B. Cherington, 1890-1892; Crawford B. Thoburn, 1892-1898; Wilmot Whitfield, 1899-1901; Dean Orman C. Palmer, acting president. 1901-2; and vice-president Charles 0. Boyer, acting president. 1902-3: Edwin M. Randal. 1903-4: Joseph E. Williams. 1904-7; Professor Leo L. Benbow, acting president. 1907-8, and president. 1908-9; Julius C. Zeller, 1909-13: Edward T. Todd, 1913-1942. B. Franklin Thompson, the present incumbent, began his term in September. 1942. Its academic organization was changed from that of a university to a college of liberal arts in 1914. The business college was discontinued that spring. The preparatory school was discontinued in 1916. The accreditation by the State Board of Education for the training of teachers for the elementary schools was surrendered voluntarily in 1927. This made the institution strictly a four-year college of liberal arts. The college has received accreditation from time to time from various organizations, and was placed on the approved list of the Association of American Universities November 12, 1932.

It has had five locations in its career. In 1923 the present campus was purchased. C. H. Jones Hall and the gymnasium were erected in 1924, and Leonard Howarth Hall was begun. The latter building was completed in 1927. In 1939 the first unit of a residence

Stadium Field House Chapel PROPOSED Gymnasium PROPOSED PROPOSED

South Hall Todd Hall Howarti

hail for women, Agnes Healy Anderson Hall, was erected. In the fall of 1941 John M. Kittredge Hall, the Student Union Building, was completed. Erection of a residence hall for men was begun near the end of 1946. The James J. Hill Endowment of $250,000 was completed in 1916. The New Endowment of $1,000,000 was completed in December, 1932. The latter was made possible through the challenge of $250,000 and payment thereof by the General Education Board. The Carnegie Corporation has recognized the College by presenting it with a College Art Set as equipment for the Art Department, a gift of $10,000 for the purchase of books for the library, and a gift of $35,000 for a fine arts project conducted in the College over a period of several years. By a survey stall the college was pronounced to have "a challenging opportunity to provide an important center of educational, religious and moral influence in the entire community as well as in the lives of its own students."

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Jones Hall New Science Auditorium President's Residence PROPOSED PROPOSED PROPOSED

Student Union Music Building Library Anderson Hall PROPOSED rRopOsEo FACULTY & ADMINISTRATION

Far Flung Faculty New Facuky Some studied, some taught, some All campus newcomers arent traveled. Members of the faculty bowed and beanied. There are ten o C, a were scattered as far as Delaware, recent additions to the faculty. New York, California, Ohio, Eng- Norman Anderson takes Weldon land, Scotland, France and Trout Rau's place in the geology depart- Lake. ment while Rau works for his doc- Dr. Martin Nelson taught nuclear torate at Iowa State. physics at Ohio State University Norman Washburne, who replaces graduate center located at Wright- Dr. Albert Blumenthal in sociology, Patterson Field in Dayton, Ohio. In holds a B. A. from the University his spare time, he did research in the of Missouri and an M.A. from the subject. New School for Social Research in After summer session teaching at New York. CPS, Dr. Raymond Seward and his Miss Mildred Kidd, Tacoma Public. wife started to California. Dr. Schools curriculum director for the Seward said he wasn't feeling too past year, has been appointed assist- well before he left. By the time they ant professor in education. She fills reached Eugene, he was sure he the post created by the Elementary wasn't. They were forced to cut Teachers' training program which their trip short and come home. supplements the secondary education ccnrses already offered. Dr. Calvin Coulter drove east for Comfort will instruct a course in in- two weeks of research on Colonial Miss Kidd has taught in the sum- surance. William Foran will help mer sessions at CPS for the past history at William and Mary. He out in the geology department while taught the second half of the sutn- two years. She helped set up the working toward his master's degree. school system for the atomic city at mer at the University of Delaware. He is also teaching two courses in Courses were U. S. History survey Oak Ridge, Tenn. She has an M.A. economic geography. Charles Guil- from Columbia University. and a seminar on Trans-Missouri ford has a teaching fellowship in West. Edward Haines will instruct in the business administration. Richard After teaching five weeks of ad- art department. Haines will also be Henderson has charge of the Work- vanced educational psychology, ele- in charge of evening classes in be- shop Band while Leroy Ostransky mentary educational psychology, and ginning ceramics, ' drawing and works on his master's degree at the elementary tests and measurements painting. Juillard School of Music. W. L. Gross joins the faculty as collected at College of Pacific, Dr. an assistant professor in business Mrs. Lucille Melovidoff will teach Powell and his wife went to Cali- foods and home management. Paul administration . Gross who has fornia. They visited friends in the Revitt will give violin instruction. written some Gregg publications, Bay region and stopped at Yosemite. served on the summer school faculty. Sidney Smith will teach economics They saw some of the ghost towns in He produced some anazing results of Latin America. Orin Thompson Calsvaras County and the mother with a beginner's demonstration will teach accounting. Dr. C. G. lode region of forty-niner fame. Trimble replaces Dr. Arnold Herr- group using the Gregg's new simpli- James Garrard worked on his doc- mann as college physician. fied method of shorthand. The tor's degree in Spanish at the U of method reduces memory load and W, then took his wife and son to puts emphasis on writing. At the Chapek Change... visit friends at Dallas, Oregon. end of five weeks each member of Miss Alice Bond attended the There's a new deal on chapel. But the demonstration group was writ- American Red Cross Aquatic School you still gotta go. There will be ing 60 words per minute, formerly a near Bremerton. She took courses in two a week, not three, and on Tues- semester's goal. Gross was superin- swimming pool leadership, advanced day and Thursday instead of the tendent of schools in Wrangell, swimming, first aid instruction, rest of the week. Alaska. canoeing and boating, and water Miss Edwina Casey replaces Mrs. It works like this. Dick Smith's safety instructors review. She spent Simon Stuart as assistant librarian. office has passed out numbers to two weeks in the Canadian Rockies Miss Helen Sprague will teach everyone who is officially registered. camping and climbing. clothing and textiles. Unless somebody fixed the machine Miss Frances Chubb says she had Kirk Stewart will teach mathe- everyone has a different number. a wonderful time on her trip to Ari- matics. When you go into chapel you are zona and California. She went to Claude McCormack takes Harold handed a slip of paper. You write Salt Lake, Bryce Canyon, Grand Cooke's place in chemistry. your number on it and give it to an Canyon, and Zion National Park. Sam Heritage switches from a attendant on the way out. She took a side trip into Nogales, teaching fellowship to a full time There's no truth to the rumor that Mexico, and saw the sidewalk shops position in business administration. the attendance slips will be collected where they sell jewelry. She had He will teach four courses in ac- by indigent athletes. They'll be taken a Mexican dinner at The Cave, counting and one in transportation. up by Spurs and Knights. which is actually in a cave, with Nine new teaching fellowships Some of the chapels this year will troubadours for atmosphere. Miss have been granted. Bill Allen will be held in the Field House so that Chubb says, "If you ever .go to In- teach in business administration and the whole student body can get to- dio, California, get a date milkshake, work on his master's degree. Arthur gether at one time. they're wonderful." She saw the

10 redwoods, had dinner in Chinatown, partment, will still teach this fall. The book is selling well, according saw some art exhibits. He has accepted a position at the to Morgan, and in its first two Edward Butler of the English de- University of South Dakota's grad- months has sold more than any of partment took his first trip east since uate school. his four previous books. 1905. He and his wife mapped out a Dr. Coolidge Chapman has a year's CPS's shaggiest professor (without full summer vacation. He attended leave to study at Cornell. mustach) is currently boring in the the 45th reunion of his class at John Lantz is working on his MA. libraries for material on the Seattle in mathematics at the U. of W. Princeton University. He went to waterfront His next book is to be Leroy Ostransky is studying for called Skidroad. the Rotary convention in New York his M.A. at the Julliard School of and heard Arthur Compton speak Music. on Atoms for Peace. Miss Jean Button, former assistant Elementary Economics... They traveled to Brookfleld, Con- Dean of Women, married Harry necticut to see Curtis Boys School One thing Doe Battin is firm about Mansfield and moved to Butte, Mon- —a business to stay in business where Mr. B. had once gone to tana. school. It had been turned into a should charge as much for its goods Harold Cboke of the chemistry de- first class tavern. They went to Bos- as it pays for them. If he needs partment is doing chemical research an illustration he can point to the ton and saw what you always see in in atomic energy. Boston, the North Church, the South SUB cafeteria. Church; Bunker Hill, the library. Mrs. Barbara La Bounty of the Last year after purse-lightened They traveled through most of New business administration department students emitted a series of howls Fngland, New York, stopped at Ni- has moved to eastern Washington. louder than the Adeiphians doing agara Falls. They went to the Cana- Mrs. Simon Stuart, former assist- Oklahoma, the Administration reor- ant librarian has moved. rimn ride, down to Windsor across ganized the SUB, lowered prices- Mrs. Raymond Vaught, who was and promptly lost $4000 bucks. from Detroit. From there they took subbing for Gordon Epperson until a four-day eight-hundred mile plea- his recent return, bowed out of the So, prices are going up again. sure cruise on the Great Lakes. cello instructor's position. Meal tickets remain the same price Their boat was the Noronic, the same Leroy Ostransky, CPS. bulkiest as last year, but if you get your boat that burned last week. instructor, is back in hb, native meals solo, it costs more. Breakfast Butler says they hit the high spots Brooklyn, commuting daily to Jul- is now 45 cents, lunch 60, and dinner like Ye'lowstone, the Black Hills hard School of Music. He'll be back 85. Anyone living in the dorms has and the Flathead Indian Reservation, next year, probably. to buy a meal ticket; anyone else but the outstanding part of the trip may if the spirit moves. for lini was the scenic view between One semester meal tickets are of the Rockies and the Bitteroot, Gla- Harem Scarem two types. There is an 18-meal-per cier National Park, and the Clark's Registrar Dick Smith and Bursar week ticket which sells for $11420 Fork of the Columbia. Gerard Banks, the sultans of CPS, including tax. Sundays you look for Dr. Paul Fossum, accompanied by are the only outnumbered men on invitations or pay cash at the SUB. his wife, traveled to Europe. the campus. They haven't hired one The other type gives 14 meals a man for their offices. No one is say- week and sells for $113.30. With it Boswell to a Bug:.. ing they planned it that way. It's you get three meals Monday through The tertiary foraminifera have lost just the way things worked out Thursday and two on Friday. their press agent. Professor Weldon maybe! All meals are served complete, not Rau of the geology department is on by individual items. Serving hours a semester's leave of absence, and remain the same. Breakfast from this is probably the last time this Of Timesfyle & the River... 7:15 to 8:15 (a.m., you dopes), lunch semester that the Trail will mention You've heard the one about the from 11:30 to 1:15 and dinner from tertiary foraminifera. frosh football star who carries his 5:15 to 6:15. Tertiary foraminifera are one- clippings around with him. Well, There are some new faces behind celled organisms, usually micro- Murray Morgan, CPS journalism in- the counter. A. E. Roth has taken scoic, which are found preserved structor, "just happened" to have over as manager of the cafeteria. in the mud and silt of the sea. They a sheaf of reviews of his latest book, He's a business administration senior make good index fossils because they The Columbia, tucked in his brief and has had seven years experience are well preserved. Consequently, case when he came back to schooL as part-owner of a local restaurant, experts hunting for oil use them as The reviews were excellent, at where he kpt books and did the guides. Rau became interested in least all that he remembered to cooking. this particular phase of paleontology bring. Pressed, Morgan admitted Lloyd Gaddis—a former editor of when he realized how little was that there was one "rather sour" re- the Trail, no less—is Roth's assistant known about the Northwest tertiary Gaddis will preside over the foun- bugs, as they are called by the oil view. The Oregon Journal found the tain. Prices there remain the same men. book dull. But the other 83 reviews Out of his research came a num- that Morgan has received from his on everything except fruit juice, ber of papers on tertiary forarnini- clipping service were all enthusi- where the cost of living rose a hun- fera. In fact, there's one with publi- astic. dred per cent. A jolt of citrus now cation pending in February. We'll The New York Herald Tribune coats a dime. probably review the information gave the book five columns of pure above at that time. But until then, praise. The New York Times said, Tea Tales... farewell to the tertiary foraminifera "More has caught the spirit of the and to Weldon Rau, who will be Columbia as surely as DiMaggio Mrs. Lela Schiffbauer will greet back next semester, complete with catches a fly ball." Newsweek found the guests at the Women's Faculty doctorate. it "full and fascinating." The com- Club tea in Anderson Hall tomor- Others absent this fall include: mon denominator of the reviews is row. "Shifty" is the new club presi- Professor Albert Blumenthal, for- that The Columb4a is exciting, well- dent New officers who will assist mer head of the CPS sociology de- organized and well-researched. her are Mrs. Raymond Vaught, vice- president; Mrs. John Magee, secre- Educ N190—Survey of Speech and History 171—The United Nations. tary; and Mrs. Richard Smith, treas- Hearing Remediation. 2 hours. Tues- 2 hours. Thursdays, 8-10. Tomlin- urer. days, 7-9 p.m. Wery. son. Educ N191—Cooperative Planning Home Ec 53—Course for Men In The tea honors the new women in Education. 2 hours. Thursdays, 7- Food Selection and Preparation. 2 faculty members and the wives of 9 p.m. Kidd. hours. Wednesdays, 4-6:50 p.m. Sul- faculty members. Mrs. C. A. Robbins Educ N192—Applied Counseling in livan. who organized the group, will be the Public Schools. 2 hours. Thursday, Journalism 65—Professional writ- honored guest. Mrs. Robert D. 4-6 p.m. Blethan. ing. 2 hours. Wednesdays, 7-9. Mor- Sprenger, last year's president, is English 55—American Lit. 2 hours. gan. chairman. Tuesdays, 7-9. Hungerford. Music 3—Music Literature. 2 Other past presidents planning to English 113—Contemporary Lit. 2 hours. Wednesdays, 7-9 p.m. D. R. attend are Mesdames C. A. Robbins, hours. Wednesdays, 7-9. Bennett. Smith. Raymond Drewry, Julius Jaeger, 0. English 203—Seminar on 18th Cen- Orchestra. 1 hour. Tuesdays, 7:15- F. Hite, G. F. Henry, Christian tury Political, Philosophical and So- 9:30 p.m. Vaught. Miller, F. A. McMillin, Samuel Weir, cial Wrtiings. 2 hours. Mondays, 7-9 Occupational Therapy N90. Leath- John Paul Bennett, John D. Réges- p.m. Jaeger. er craft. 1 hour. Tuesdays, 7-9 p.m. ter, H. D. Sinclair, Phillip Fehlandt, French—According to demand. Forbes. Raymond Seward, Warren Perry, E. German—According to demand. 0. T. N41—Recreational Crafts. 1 Delmra Gibbs, R. Franklin Thomp- H i s t o r y 21 - Contemporary. 2 hour. Thursdays, 7-9 p.m. Forbes. son, Melvin 0. Kohier and Clyde hours. Mondays, 8-10. Tomlinson. Psych NiOl—See Educ NiOl. Keutzer. History 137—History of Washing- Psych 203—Seminar on Personality Mrs. Leonard Jacobsen will play ton. 2 hours. Wednesdays, 7-9 p.m. Analysis. 2 hours. Mondays, 7-9 p.m. incidental piano music. Tea is from Coulter. Prince. 2 to 4 p.m.

Regsfraflon... Any transfer student who walked off with his registration credentials from Dick Smith's office is asked to return them as soon as possible.

Evening CIases Adult education classes - offering regular college credit —will start Monday evening. Registration may be made at the time of the first meeting of the class. Tuition is at the rate of $10 per credit hour. The schedule, as outlined by Dean Regester, is: Art 57—Beginning Ceramics. 1 credit hour. Mondays 7-9 p.m. Haines. Art 55 or 155—Sculpture. Art 153 —Advanced Ceramics. 1 hour. Tues- days, 7-9 p.m. Glenn. Art 53—Drawing and Painting. I hour. Wednesday, 7-9 p.m. Haines. B.A. 61c—Business Law. 3 hours. M-T-W, 7 p.m. Murtland. B.A. 64—Accounting. 3 hours. M- W, 8-9:15 p.m. Garrison. B.A. 114 - Business Correspond- dence. 3 hours. T-T, 8-9:15 p.m. Jamieson. B.A. 177—Tax Accounting. 3 hours. M-W, 8-9:15 p.m. Collins. B.A. 220—General Survey of Ac- counting. 3 hours. T-T, 7-8:15 p.m. Allen. Educ NIOl—Educational Psychol- ogy. 2 hours. Mondays, 7-9 p.m. K.idd. Educ S166—Mental Hygiene in the Classroom. 2 hours. Mondays, 4-6 p.m. Kidd.

12 SPORTS

BgGame... CPS's 1949 gridiron machine rolls off the assembly line on to the turf of the Lincoln bowl at 8:00 p.m. to- morrow for a trial run with the crosstown PLC Gladiators. Coach John Heinrick will send his eleven-cylinder model at top speed against the Lutes in the traditional non-conference opener and Puget Sound supporters are looking for several new sparkplugs in the Log- ger pigskin mechanism. Center Dick Boyle, quarterback John Heinrick Jr., and tackle Jim Pyle should bolster an already let- terman-loaded lineup. Boyle and Heinrick are transfer from WSC, while Pyle, a 245-pounder, hails from Houston, Texas. Three freshman backfield aspirants, Muscle Mentors Art Viafore and Jack Newhart, who lugged the leather for Lincoln's son and Howie Martin should supply Two of the loop's best regarded mythical state champions, and Danny Heinrick with plenty of reserve teams sulTered humiliating set- Buford, an all-Seattle halfback from power. backs. Portland U. downed suppos- Garfield high, may see action. On the other hand, the Norsemen edly strong CWCE eleven 32-0 and are loaded with talent An all vet- Lewis and Clark thumped Western eran backfield composed of Captain Washington 19-0. Whitworth ran Jack Guyot at fullback, Blaine Mc- away with a 32-13 victory over Kanna and Gene Strandness, two Northern Idaho and $t. Martins speedy halfbacks, and spearheaded scored a 21-0 conference win over by big John Jurkovich at quarter UBC in other games played. promises nothing but trouble for the Loggers and Coach Mary Tonmer- vik won't hesitate to turn loose his Lol The Lowly Subs... vaunted aerial circus in an effort to A jayvee team, made up prin- break into the win column. cipally of sophomores and fresh- PLC erased an early three touch- men, will this year replace the reg- down deficit in their opening tilt ular frosh football team of past sea- with Pacific University and emerged sons. with a 20-20 tie. Passing proved to be the Lutes most potent ground Coach John Heinrick will lose fif- Heading the list in the bid for gaining weapon. teen linemen come next June so he welcomes all newcomers now. If starting assignments are 27 letter Evergreen conference football winners. Three-fourths of last year's you're a freshman or a sophomore teams took it on the chin last week and hanker for the fame, glory and starting backfield return in the per- in games with outside opposition. sons of speed merchant Mel Light, cleat-marks now's the time to come hard-hitting Len Kalapus and pow- forth. Even a junior or two may erful Bob Robbins. get the nod of approval if he hurries Up forward, end Dick Brown, 0 and has got what it takes. tackles Hank Pond and Dick Herm- ? The jayvees will play an import- sen, guards Warren Wood and Lee ant role in the CPS football plc- Turnbuil and center LaVerne Mar- tore this season, according to the tineau appear to have the inside and U.D coaches. When, and if, injuries should provide the Maroon and strike, the men most likely to suc- White with the nucleus of a for- ceed to the top spots will be the midable front line. jayvees. Bob Carlson, Don Greenwood, Roy The regular schedule has not been Bodine, Norm Pollom, Ed Amiss, Ing completed but for those guys who Thompson and Lindy Ailment return to help solve the flanking problem; have an urge for vengeance on the tackles Milk Hegstrom and Paul Army, two games have been tenta- Whitcomb will be available; guards tively booked, one, with Fort Lewis Bob Demko, Harvey deCarteret and and the other with Fort Lawton. Les Gilsdorf will strengthen the 32,0 Coaches Harry Bird and Ray inner defense; ace gnter Ed Notley Mahnke will work the group and will relieve MarttAeau and backs eo will be assisted by Joe Mahoski and Jim Sulenes, Burt Ross, Dale Lar- Bud Greeley.

13 Buckefs Already Basketball has a brand new show- place, and this should be the year they romp. The whole squad is back for another year. Of course, "old re- liable" Fmcham is lost to the squad by the sheepskin route, but he was lost early last season due to an auto- mobile smashup. Bill Stivers, Bob Angeline, Rod Gibbs, Don Hoff and Dick Brown are the boys back along with Bob Rinker, Bob Sater, Hersey, Blevins, etc., etc. 1) Manuel Moore, a flashy gent from Overlake High, is one of the prize froth to help things out. Ken Bayer, 6-5 skyscraper from Bremerton, should assist also. WaUy Erwin. an- other Navy-town lad, scampers in the back court, and should push the Wednesday ' old timers a bit. The University of Washington is and the opener in the new gym. Idaho (f State will follow the Huskies by a few days. There is an outside chance that Stanford may drop in for a set Saturday j too but don't get your hopes up. The Loggers are tentatively traveling to Eugene to play the Oregon Ducks, with a return game in the new plant *ieeae planned for the next year. Graduate Manager Smith had the Phillips Oilers on the hook for a GEORGE VICTOR'S tussle this season, but when the Huskies backed out of their game with the Oilers the gents from Okia- hoina canceled their whole Puget Sound tour. Coach Cab Renick of Merry Max the Oilers says "Next year for sure." Of course therq are the four Don- BALLROOM nybrooks with P?.C, plus the rest of that tough Evergreen Conference. It Featuring the Music of should be a winter of slam-bang, interesting basketball. f&"" ROA Rain or Shine, Says Bob The intramural managers, headed AND HIS ORCHESTRA by Bobby Angeline, emerged from • coke-filled room this week with • plan to smooth out the schedule. Lots were drawn to determine. who would start the season come Monday Watch This Space afternoon. The games will be played, Every Week For the Names of the according to Bobby, come rain or even sun at Jefferson field. Immedi- LUCKY PERSON ately following the football run-off, the campus athletes will swing into Receiving Complimentary Tickets. the tennis tourney, weather per- mitting. The intramural managers hope to publish a rule book to cover the .54W4 & ,1deo,e /t/1i4 9236 rules to every sport on the intramur- al roster. The managers also plan Special Rates To Fraternities & Sororities for to print a monthly bulletin to in- Private Parties & Dances form students of the stapdings in the race for the big cup.

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