52
i . W, M. JOSON <. ll O p e nng Day Fi ds Four N e w Fac e s B e hind Classroom and Offic e D e sks Four new members have been add to the faculty of Pacific Lutheran Collece th year. They are Mrs. K. A. Holstad. Mrs. W. M, Johnson, . J. A, , and the Rev. L. A. B. Nelson. Mrs. Holstad, who hou- mother and tant dean ot women, comes to p. L. C. from Minnealis. She was In the parsonage of a' pIoneer pastor In Mlnno� and attend� schꝏls In that ste, many \she has at the head of various church or- ganizations. She w prident of the In. teatlonal Women ' s Miionary Federa- tion for a slx·year פri. Th year Mrs. Holstad wlll giving her full time to her duties at Pacific Lutheran College. Mrs. Johnson has come to P. L C. to teach speech and dramatic. She is al organizing a debate team, Receiving her B. A. degt at the Univety of Neb . , Mrs. Johnn ntinu her k in advanced spch t at Nw University, where abe rraduate under Dr. �hon�rrer.8he a done ex- tenalve wOrk with cmunity p and children's theater projʦ. . M. J u �nt A. O . Aold In the fO!Jndlnc of the ttle. Country Theater at h, North ota, and has en ala with College. Mꝏrhead, n. is IIvin at prnt with her enʦ, . and . W. F. dwig, in Tacom . Her husnd, . Wm. M, Johnn, 2 n- ing overseas. Dr, J. A. , who wUl head the . partment o� Biology here year, is on leave of absence fm Otavua Adolph College, St. Peter, Minnota, where he wa ao the partment head. NOTED VISITORS TO PARTICIPATE IN J UBILEE W EEK The Golden Jubilee Campaign of Pa- cific Lutheran College l reach a cli- max in the ftivities plned for Wed- nesday through SWlday, tor 11 to 15. . En ha had extenalve experience, both in teaching and rearch. Be tveled on collecting th-' - out the Uni States, , Ger- many and the J lands. a The JubUee p Wneay. evening, with a sפcial rally (or plonee"rs. t The Reverend S. J. N. Ylvtsaker, pastor I or Our �vlor's Lutheran Church, Stan- wo. Wash, . will the speaker. ._--- - ThUdal. wilt be d . chiefly to on groups. . Carl A' I V. , of G, Oregon. President of the Columbia Conference of the Au- gna n. � bring the ming I ' devotional addre. . J. C. K. Preus, of MinneaUs. Dictor of Education of . L. A. B. PH the N. L. C. A., the Rev. R. C. Burke of 1 S. K. A HOLST Angeles. President of the CaUfoia I ' ----==---�----- Conleren, Augustana Syn, the I WANT MY MAMA . OR &Lu�';e o �h: ' In°�:tleQU' WE LOVE THE UPPERCLASSMEN at the later meetings. I b; Daphne Hellman a e uth Puget u Clrcuit of the "Come out, come out. wherever you are!" and" scrubbing the step" with o thbrushe" Women's Missionary Federation of the I And take It from the fra sh . th command were minor items the inquisitorial set- N. L. C. A l in chge activit i , ven in no uncertain terms. The up. on Friday mog and afteoon. W. M. Enthusitic upper.clamen presided F. memrs of the three crating Sy- I s peding shout shꝏ k the rafters as over a fall house-clea ning campa 1 gn l ests. Sפakers Include Mrs. startled shles suddenly came to Ufe on the fourth !lꝏr while weary frhmen (� 4) 1 that unforgettable midnight of P te 1� r trudged up and down four flights of stairs . 19. with ards and bedsprings. . J uniors Plan Mixer 1 No mem Paul Reveres were these, B, ut all g and thin must come but Jt plan upper-cen. und an end. And in spite of weary wind- ave torrow night, pmr =, for I sleepers were ruthlessly dum from thei r piפs moaning mul the - the all-schꝏl mixer which the Junior bunks. Bewildered fr, fod themselves lowed themselves to drawn to a twt- s p for 7:- In the recre . &ti I to the ... �rt of ties, " light . Now full-f מ . the pram, Mrs. Rha ins. , d bright remar at p. L. C.'s "one big fa" they Jolh Young, girls' phycal education I-I strictly o th in question hrd their votc in the or the lov . l show movi that she k the fatal pronouncemeof their Day of "Alma Mate r" which now lOn to them. of mp fe at . Cn n Dꝏm. orleifn h nts rose an I Just the heallng balm of slumr evemng of fun and enteent all. again settled over all, Crash! Wallop ! Refreshmenʦ l served, for which! Blngo! Gus who? .The upper-cl enl the charge of 10 cenʦ l be e to At 5:30 in the moming? Y. d they eominp e ents _ . ct.. were aaain " pagI D g _� J shmen !" .T,. 'r y . Religion Emphasized B y Gabrielsen, Miller the surply humane admonition, Sep m r = _ Religious p " row on fomething warm," the frened Week. . B. T. Gabrielson ofattle freshies' we fd into the f. and . Samuei MUler of Mieal. The oer of the moing w callsthen- spkers. Nꝏn devotions, evening wk dted U, Re- les. G. I. style. ' other words, double csion grou. +&1005 Week at P. e Rev: ! � It remain double time until B. T. Gab, r Of the t N- t ה of · Parkland en ,. September 29-Junlor mlxer . f theran Church In ttle. gave hemmed by hand. or, i n '. by f, enUre student by. tion t הcl . the n , me, eg 7:45 p. m. ou Wy. . p� פe l , .oions to laund uel ,' of the Luer·Bible lp sh. the trh tu of n . the ·found thelv spping In of an hest . med a W r. r 12 h 8r. 15olden JubU Day". More delled p elsewhere in פr. . He l te pus ay l the -. In , . m œ with a hred.watt r. r It-Homg, Held gl. Wa' the lawn with ao In nJuction with Golden Jubilee. Written numero itific articles In current lerice Jou . n has en unable to conduct h classes a yet, as he 2 ruפraUng from an oפration, but he expecʦ to with on. the meantime Ult b ""-� _ of the Uy of Wn. The Rev. L A. B. Neln of Clarksn. Wash .• holds the dual ition of dean Of (Connu e 3) Enrollment 1< student h@ve sign ellment car for the fall mester. the rea- tra.r's office rertS. numr, 132 are women and < men. fresh- men are far in the lead with 91 mem- bers-73 women and 18 men. Next in Une the phomores, who claim 26 wome.n and 1 solitary male. Following ele are the J, with 21 women and 5 .men. The nior count is 11 women men. One sפcial "tudent is enrolled. STUDENTS CHOOSE CLASS OFFICERS With the election offla. stu- dt affa nOWn fl a. e o!ficlal unt show fo elec- tion ret: Freahman s: Ivar , p� Ident; Gerhard , k. vice- prent; Ingrid , l e, Ore" �tary: U�' treꜳurer; and , , r- . geantat., phomore e . Idaho,- prident; , vice-pr?1dt; o , , secretary; and o, SUver- , .• �ar. Junior cs: JD. Stanw, ent; e Lien. ,' vice- prdent; Butler, iew. - retary-t�r; Alrt K. :we- quah, æret.at-ar, nior e: ' , , paldent: lle B�l. Stanw, v1ce-pr1dt:. k . . , -r.' len� ion, beJ. P well .. decided they need Of t-at-ar.

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MRS. W, M. JOHNSON

SEPTEllBkR 28. llK4

Open.ing Day Fi�ds F our New Faces Behind Classroom and Office Desks

Four new members have been added to the faculty of Pacific Lutheran Collece thls year. They are Mrs. K. A. Holstad. Mrs. W. M, Johnson, Dr. J. A, El.son, and the Rev. L. A. B. Nelson.

Mrs. Holstad, who wUl serve as house­mother and as.sbtant dean ot women, comes to p. L. C. from Minneapolis. She was ra1s� In the parsonage of a' pIoneer pastor In Mlnneso� and attend� schools In that state, For many years \ she has

at the head of various church or­ganizations. She was president of the In. ternatlonal Women's Missionary Federa­tion for a slx·year period. ThLs year Mrs. Holstad wlll be giving her full time to her duties at Pacific Lutheran College.

Mrs. Johnson has come to P. L. C. to teach speech and dramatic!!. She is also organizing a debate team, Receiving her

B. A. degtee at the UnivenJty of Nebra,s.. ka, Mrs. Johnson continued her work in advanced speech t.ra.in1n8" at NorthweIS\:.em University, where abe toot. rraduate wort. under Dr. �hon�rrer.8he baa done ex­tenalve wOrk with community procrama and children's theater projects. .

Mrs. Johnson served. u �nt to A. O. Arnold In the fO!Jndlnc of the Little. Country Theater at hl'JO, North Dt.tota, and has been aS8OClated. with Ooncordla College. Moorhead., Minnesota. She is IIvina' at present with her Parents, Mr. and Mm. W. F. Ladwig, in Tacom ... Her husband, E'ruI. Wm. M, Johnson, 18 MIn­ing overseas.

Dr, J. A. Elson, who wUl head the De. partment o� Biology here this year, is on leave of absence from Oustavua AdolphU!'l College, St. Peter, Minnesota, where he wa..s also the Department head.

NOTED VISITORS TO PARTICIPATE IN J UBILEE WEEK

The Golden Jubilee Campaign of Pa­cific Lutheran College will reach a. cli­max in the festivities planned for Wed­nesday through SWlday, October 11 to 15.

Dr. Elson ha..s had extenalve experience, both in teaching and research. Be has traveled on collecting expedJUonI t.h.n>uah-'

- out the United. States, 8candlnavta, Ger­many and the Ban Juan Islands. and baa

The JubUee program opens Wednesday. evening, with a special rally (or plonee"rs. t The Reverend S. J. N. Ylvtsaker, pastor I or Our �vlor's Lutheran Church, Stan­wood. Washington, .will be the speaker.

._.---:--. ThUl3daY-l. 'PfOgram wilt be devoted . chiefly to discussion groups. Dr. Carl A' I V. ,Lund of Gresham, Oregon. President of the Columbia Conference of the Au­gustana Synod.. � bring the morning I' devotional address. Dr. J. C. K. Preus, of MinneapoUs. Director of Education of REV. L. A. B. NEL80H the N. L. C. A., the Rev. R. C. Burke of 1 MRS. K. A. HOLSTAD

LoG Angeles. President of the CaUfornia I -;-�;;-;-;:-;-;;;;;--;;:'�'---':-:;-;-;;:;-';----==---�-----Conlerence, Augustana Synod, and the I WANT MY MAMA • • . OR �,,;:� &Lu�';e::

o�h::''';:'In°I'Se�:tleQU::' WE LOVE THE UPPERCLASSMEN

speak at the later meetings. I b; Daphne Hellman and AnIta. Roth The South Puget Sound Clrcuit of the "Come out, come out. wherever you are!" and" scrubbing the step" with toothbrushe"

Women's Missionary Federation of the I And take It from the frash. this command were minor items In the inquisitorial set­N. L. C. A. will be in charge of activities , was ,pven in no uncertain terms. The up. on Friday morning and afternoon. W. M.

I

Enthusiastic upper.classmen presided F. members of the three cooperating Sy- I s

tampeding shout shook the rafters as over a. fall house-cleaning campa1gn on nods wtll be guests. Speakers Include Mrs. startled fl"eshles suddenly came to Ufe on the fourth !loor while weary freshmen (Con� OIl Pap 4) 1 that unforgettable midnight of SePte';l1�r trudged up and down four flights of stairs . 19. with boards and bedsprings .

. Juniors Plan Mixer 11 No modem Paul Reveres were these, B,ut all good. and bad. things must come but Just pla.1n upper-cla.s.smen. Sound to an end. And in spite of weary wind-

.save tomorrow night, September 29, for I sleepers were ruthlessly dumped. from their. pipes and moaning muscles the trash &1-the all-school mixer which the Junior bunks. Bewildered frosJl, found themselves lowed themselves to be drawn to a twt­class is planning for 7:45 In the recre.&tion I escorted to the ... �rt of Calamities," light bonfire. Now full-fledged members room. As part of the program, Mrs. Rhoda. Ha.1rpins. smirlts, and bright remarks were at p. L. C.'s "one big family" they Jolhed Young, girls' phy.s1cal education Instruc-I strictly taboo as those in question heard their votces in the s1ng1ng or the beloved tor. will show movies that she has taken the fatal pronouncements of their Day of "Alma Mater" which now belOngs to them. of campus life at PLC. Chairman LilltIln Doom. 'lborleifson and her asststants...promJse an I Just as the heallng balm of slumber evemng of fun and entertainment to all. again settled over all, Crash! Wallop! Refreshments will be served, for which! Blngo! Guess who? .The upper-classmenl the charge of 10 cents will be ma.de to At 5:30 in the moming? Yes. and they eominp e(!ents

_(xu'.er .cost.. w.ere aaain "pagIDg _� Jnl:shmen!" ¥illtl_ .TIIMda,.. 'September � throqb FrIday.

Religion Emphasized By Gabrielsen, Miller

the surprisingly humane admonition, September 29 _ Religious Empha.s1s "Throw on fomething warm," the frenzied Week. Rev. B. T. Gabrielson of-8eattle freshies' were forced into the fog. and Dr. Samuei MUler of M1nriea.polla.

The order of the morning was callsthen- speakers. Noon devotions, evening dis-'Ibis week has been des.lgnated 85, Re- les. G. I. style. 'In other words, double cuasion groups.

11&1005 Emphasis Week at PLC. The Rev: time! � It remained double time until B. T. Gabrielsen, pastor Of the P'tr8t Nor- the outsklrta of· Parkland had been I)'ida.,.. September 29-Junlor mlxer . far

wegian Lutheran Church In Seattle. gave hemmed by hand. or, in this 'case. by foot, enUre student body. ReCreation room., the chapel taIka and . led the d1scu.ss1on Dressed, or messed, in everything from 7:45 p. m. groups on Tuesday and Wedneaday. Dr. p� and. peeled,.otlions to laundry bags Samuel M1Uer,'Dean, of the Lutheran·Bible aDd lamp shades. the embarra.saed. trash In&t1tute of MInneapolis. was the eb.&pel ·found themselves stopping busses In

search of an honest man. armed like a

Wedne3dar. October 12 throqh 811Ddar. October 15-Oolden JubUee Day". More debilled program elsewhere in paper. speaker th1a morning. He w1ll be on tl),e

campus today and. tomorrow and wtll bring the chapel -.. In the mornIng, .

modern Dloeenea with a hq,n<!red.watt 8a&ardar. October It-Homecoming, Held globe. Watering"' the lawn with teaapoollS; In conJuction with Golden Jubilee.

....

Written numerous scientific articles In current sclerice Journal&.

Dr. Elson has been unable to conduct hls classes a.s yet, as he 18 recuperaUng from an operation, but he expects to be with UJ soon. In the meantime his claases aro. beIniI l&U&llt b.l' ""-� Alcorn_ of the University of Waahlngton.

The Rev. L. A. B. Nelson of Clarkston. Wash .• holds the dual position of dean Of (Continued OIl Pace 3) ",---':::=======---..

Enrollment 160 student.! [email protected] signed enl'9llment

cards for the fall semester. the rerta­tra.r's office reportS. Of this number, 132 are women and 28 men. The fresh­men are far in the lead with 91 mem­bers-73 women and 18 men. Next in Une are the sophomores, who claim 26 wome.n and 1 solitary ma.le. Following elOISe are the Jun1or8, with 21 women and 5 .men. The senior count is 11 women and .. men. One special "tudent is enrolled.

STUDENTS CHOOSE CLASS OFFICERS

With the election of claaI offleera. stu­dent affairs are nOW'1n full awtna. 'lbe o!ficlal count showed the follow1ng elec­tion returns:

Freahman class: Ivar P1hl, Bothell, p� Ident; Gerhard Ro4tn, Castle Hoek. vice­president; Ingrid Martenson, Prineville,

Ore" �tary: Marian KnUtocin�' treaaurer; and Bob 1Anon, Tac:oma, ler- . geantr-at.IU"IIla,

Sophomore e� :E . Fa� Idaho,- president; Tacoma, vice-pret1d..mt; Andenoo , Bow, secretary; and Gerry olsoIi, SUver­ton, Ore .• �a.surer.

Junior cla.ss: Doris JurgeSOD. Stanwood, prealdent; AnnSe Lien. Parkland,' vice­president; Marian Butler, Longview. sec­retary-t�r; and. Albert Kuhn. :we­quah, aera:eant.at-arma,

Senior elus: Mlldred' Brodland, Tac0-ma, prealdent: Annabelle B�tol. East StanwoOd, v1ce-prea1dent:.aDd Pern Erick": .

son. Poulsbo, secretary-treuialer.' The len� ion, beJ.na: 80 well .behaved. decided they � no need Of !l ae�t-at-arma.

- mlJr tiIloDring .sf PubUIb.ed eomy two weeki durtnc the ICbool year by IWdentl of Paelnc Lutben.n OOllece. AllIIIIHi

om 1 Telephone: GRanIte 8811 Don GlIbertMn. �x '43, who was personnel director at the Since the last issue �f the :U:M .. Eleanor ------:- -"'u"'''-'''''!eu�_:::::';;:;;:OII:;:-;pI;; �:;; ... ::-�I�.OO�per; ;y.; ... ;.;; =::..:=� �Y�-"'-Ja,...n""" ..lD...Ul"""_4r-. �4O;'1l"-�,,,-___ .

Entered as eec:crui claM matter, October 2, 1925, at the Post Address: O. B. OUbe-rt.!tm. A. 8., Co. 771-44, Camp Waldron, Stevens, who'li in the service. Tt14itr mar- .

..

oatce at Partland. WashJnstOn, und.er the Act of I USNTC, ",rragut, Idaho. rlage took place on the 25th of lIlay.

Matth J, um.

Karl Baehner, member or the la.st gnlduatlng class of PLHB A baby son, Robert Eupne. was born to

CO-EDITORS . EDITOIllAL 8TAI"I" I this sprlng. Is stationed In Floi1d a.. Karl Alvin Bachner. 8 2/0, Lt. J.,. E. and Mrs. Torpt (the former ..... A.NJTA STUEN, ALlC,E BRUDIE I·Box 18, Platoon 355. U. S. Naval Air StaUon, Jacbonvllle, Ella M. ,Swanson. ex '42)' or 'nllamook.

Associate Editor .. Ad\1ser .

. ..... ........ .. -���R�;e n:�t: I Florida. "::n�Il( ... m.n' ot ..... Inna Norlh. Fred MlDer, ex '43, la sUII on the reeuperaUng list. follow!?, ex '41, to Howard. B. Willes o� OrUnr wa.s

BUSINESS STAFF I a long service In the South Pacific. He can be t!!ached. at p, O. announced on June e. BUSINESS MANAGER .:.. . ........... .DOROTBY NIEMAN Box 286, AAF Convalescent .Center, n. George Wright. Wash.' A.ss1.stant Maila�r . . . . . .. Marian Butler Ington. Fred vlsited the campus with se�raJ buddies the first Lt. (ex '41) and Mrs. R. H. Clark (Bar·

Business Secretary .............................. Inga Johnson week of school. bar .. Xavier, ex '40) became the parenla Ad\·ertl.s1ng Manager . Cortnne Erickson of a bor' Larry Robert, on June D. Ctrc�aUon ........... CeceUa Oardlln F\)nner hlah school studenta at PlJIS will be Interested to . • Servicemen's ClrculatJon .. Annabelle Blrkestol know that their last year student body prexy ls now In- I t's a Navy F�i1y Exchange ....................................................... ................ Qrace Btrkestol C8.1lfomia In the Army Air Corps. Address: P't't. C, W. BWinp- Another Stuen hal jolned the Navy. SoUclton: Margie Carlson, Grace Oulhaugen, Rumohr Oul- l ler. 32918861, SecUon L, Flight A., 3033 &- �., AAF, Bue Unit·, El1nbetb Stuen '38 .Ieft Bunday 8eptem-haugen, Jocelyn Lynne, Ruth BJerltan. and NaomJ �u. stockton Fleld, CaUfomla. - ber 17, for HlDl�r Couere, New York, the Advlae, ........... . ............ . .... .. .. . .. ............ . ... .. .... ... . .0. J. S uen I PI<. �

Sha ... I

......... A. T. Co" 15'h In!" APO 3. c/o I W�=,::-::,:' .'.':d'::'a� ot the educa-

eltollcHUC ... PM, N. Y., is now. with the UnJted St&tes forces In Sout·hem I tlon department het!!. In 1M3 !he re­France. Marv has been In the aervlce over a year. He was as-

I celved a B. A. degree after studytna dur­soclate edItor of the M.M. when he left .a. year ago last spring'j ing the summer .sewons. She taught SInce that time he has: been wounded twice, and has seen .school for four yean and for . the put

To all fellow-student.!!, a hearty hello! SOme of you are old studes. but more are new. We of the MOOring Mast wish to add our welcome to the fel1cltatlons which have already been

action in North Africa, Sicily, Italy, and now In France. year had been working In Tacoma. The other Stuens In the Navy are Lt.

During the summer Ed Saruhll", ex '44., fIntshed HospItal John Stuen, '36. Navy air corps, and Mark Corps School at �rragut and was transferred to the Hospital Stuen, '43, V-I2. Marquette Medlcal Staff of the Naval Hospital at Oreat Law, ro, Address: Edwin School, Milwaukee, Wi&. exten�ed to you. We mean It when 'We say we're glad to see

you!

With thls school year PLC is entering on the 51st year of her exlstence Fifty good years llc behind us: and we are con­rtdent. by t.ne grace of God, even greater years lie ahead. We are prlvtle(� to be the students at the beginning of thls recond hAlf-century. It is not an empty phrase when we say we are Il favored group, for certainly there are many young people who would Uke to be tn college with u.s today whom duty class elsewhere. We are thInkJng especially of Ulose who are fighting our war on the world's battlefronts, and those who ate functioning in needed capaclUeo on the homefront. Tbey are gtvlng more for us than we can ever hope to gtve in mum. What can we do to MOW them our appreciation?

.

We can keep alIve the traditions and ideals that are POO.

When those who are temporarily absent return, they want a living, active col1eg>e. We must keep our orga.nlta.t101ls and activities functioning and not let them die out, or worse. be­come mere names in our year book. We must rMPROVE our campus ute. not let it go backward. 'I1let!! are fewer of us to do it, but that Is aU the more reason why we must do It. Although the men have not altogether dlsappeared from our campus, the women outnumber them 5 to 1. It's up to you Lute lassies to hustle most of the fuel to keep t.he home fires bumIng, not only . for the present PLe, but for the PLC of the future.

When registration figures were tabulated we learned that the freshman clas6 includes more than halt of the student body. Freshmen, this Is a. challenge to you r Come out and fiU

E. Sandvtg, HA lie, us Naval Hospital Staff, Oreat Lakes, In.

Herb Nlenatedt, ex '44., completed "boot camp" this summer and vlslted at PLC several days in JulY. He ls now attending Hoepltal Corps School at Farragut. Address: Herben Nlenstedt, S 2/c, Class 6-45, Hospital Corps School, Farragut, Idaho.

Gordon HUlIeby, ex '41, waa with the na.vy forces that In­vaded Salpan. He was home on leave a '!hort Ume ago. Ad­dress: Enatgn Oordon Huseby, Fleet Ftre Control School, Class 1-44., Destroyer Base, San Diego, Cal1fomia.

Co-eds Head Mooring Mast

Thls year, for the first time In 114 hlstory, the Mooring Mast will be run on a joint-edItorship b&!ils. The two students chosen by the faculty for this JOb are Alice Brudle and Anita Stuen.

Alice, a Sophomore, ls an active mem. ber of L.D.R .. W.A.A., A.W.8., and Ptre-sIde. She was vice-president of MiSsIon

ErWp Dick Lan,-&.on, U. S., LeI (L) 632, 43 c/o Fleet. P. O., Society the tlrat semester of UK3-44. San Fl'ancl..sco, ex '43. He ls with the amphibiOUs forces of the �t �e:r �:

tet;: ::::a�� ��. �ew:

navy. donn elrl.

Anita. a Junior, Is a member of the Vlk­JerTOl Enp, ex '44, lett PBrkl&nd on Thesday, September 12, ing Club. She was secretary of LDR. laat to Join Uncle Sam's naval forCf:s. Address: Jerrol R. Enge, year, and Is treasurer of the A.W.S. th1I ����fl.U' S. N. R., Box 18, U. S. Naval Station, Jacksonville, year. Last year she waa a 8oph�

Pvt. Arthur Bacauon, ex '42, Is stationed In M1sslss1ppl. Address: Pvt. Arthur Bagauon, 3704, AAF Ba.se UnJt. Section N, Box 417, Keeler Fteld, M1M1sslppl.

attendant on May Da.y, and served as assistant to the director for the ach091 play. Anita 18 a day atudent.

Both girls wet!! on the editorial staff of the Mooring Mast last year.

the rankSl PLC'., activ1ties at!! YOUR &ctlvttl�lal, re- Fa1es MartIn, ex '40, I..s In a. ra.llway bataUon overseas. Ad Ilgtous, musical, Uterary, dramattc-to· name only some-all dress: Prc. Fales Martin, 39145480, Co. C-735 Rlwy. Opm Bn these organlzattons are open to you. Make them your own, and APO 5942,. c/o P. M., N. Y. be funcUoning members. not Just "among those belonging,,, I '

New address of Robert Ma.riln, ex '36, is: Prc. Robert Martin I 39341884, 136 Inf. Co. A, APO 15416, c/o P. M., N. Y. ANDERSON CIOCEIY

_ Wuh. oa _ SCHOOL SUPPLIES- aDd

HOME IlBMEDB8

I epi Fred M. K.nIecer. ex '41, has a new addreSS:'

Cpt. Fred

M. Krueger, 39202-M6. Coffeyvtne RTU-(PR) CAAP, Coffey­vUle, Kamas.

Three gold stars were added to P .L.C.'s honor ron during the summer. Hup Swauon. (.see story elsewhere in the paper)

.. COLLEGE HAIRCUTS PARKLAND IAlIER

C. R. MARSH AI BoclYlc. and John CraIi" Jom.on gave thetr Uvea in the service of t2leir country. AI BoeIv1g, ex '43, waa killed on the battlefront of the Amertcan Army in· Italy in July. John CraIg

Johnson, ex '43, was reported ml.sa1ng in Dec 1943. lib death

I was first. reported in May and was verifIed in July by his I

� pas"'r. the Rev. Prul' ot Tacoma. / IERCLAND HA R WARE CO_ Robert Lanoo, who waa recently released from the anned I .... p:

Is back at PLC f1n1.shlng the laat halt of h1.s ft'06h year I 'i 1'180 He was Ih-the service aBout a year

I -� - ��

Gas A.ncIenon. ex '43, recently graduated ttOii'i'the Naval Air I 'n'aIn1ng Center, Corpus ChrisU, and wu eommlsa1oned an En.s1gn in the U. 8. Naval Reserve. Oua vialted the campus the

WhII ,..,. ".... .moe � "n' week ot ""'001. . .

" I c.. FRED CHllmNSEN ' 8TATJOIIID S Zle LIoJd M. Nrh .. has been &MJen� by the Navy to be I �)

part of the froeb claM: whJch is at� the School' of 1113 P&cIftc AYe. :aa. .. Medicine at the Uhivera1ty of Alabama.. LlOYd wu a pre·med.lca +::==::;;:::::=======:t

. I . .��� stUdent when he J�ft here as • sophomore In the apt1ng of 1M3. j" 'nIE NEWEST I..&"-" I .Seoood U. 0-.. B. ....... 1M1 """ua�.ot PLC . ..... re- RECORDS .. ������;���::������!!:. __ �I cently awarded' the A.ir Me:dal. Be Is now a squadron leader

flylng- a Plylnl-Portrea& Addreaa: Lt. O. Broc, 0-758304, and 8IIlIZT Mp'BIC

<23"rd Bomb 8qd" 300 Bomb OrouP. APO 047. c/o P . .... N. Y.. TED IIOW� MU�IC • i, BuiUl/or C/wrtrelf!r" N. Y. '. I , ___ .. ,1 ... !2 .. , I�- .�23..:.. _____ .-. __ �o

September. · lNt

COACH OLSON TRAINS 1944 GRID SQUAD

--- - ----------

-----pD'1'OE""'I'IIJtD rom a Frosh Diary I -:CLlJB NOTES:�-

Sept. 9--Have you ever felt that Uttle PLC gridiron men are·on the 10 aplnl Ilow ot excitement that comes Just before DELTA. PHI KAPPA L. D. R. Coach Clift Olson hopes to have his 13 openIna a lift? 'If you have, you'll know . Allee Kaaland, Pre8ldent of the Delta St.art.1ric _out the new year under the man 8Q read.y to tackle ita ttnt sam ilii&Or"UiemIlnr---r--tla:d-before !hi..Jtapp&.-doon1toQt- 81r1L.OJ:P.U..1a: dlrecUoo of Prelldent Euiuce 'I'orVenC1. opponent the end of next �k.. Games coming to collee-e. It was like a. pack. hu announced Ute namN Df officers chos. e1eeted. �met-""_------i. v.1th Vauatm and other tams are In the that I'd heard of and that had �n de- en at .. m� held In the �ption day; September 22, and cboee \.he other ornnl. Ourlna the put two weeks Coach scrtbtod vividly. but was SOUl,thinl that I" room Thursday. September 14. The rol- orticera fol' thla achoot year. has bIeen putting his men throuah most oC must open and see for my.self to really lowing were electfl1: Doris Jurgenson, vice The foUowln& were elected.: vice preel­the vtsor9us football tra1n1ng that his know. prea.ldent; Anna Anderson, secretary; Dot- dent. Rumohr Oulht.ueen; secretary. Leta famous· L1tUe Ali-American men went Sept. 12-I"m opening the package now, othy Nieman, treasurer; Daphne Hellman, Metzan; treasurer, RoUt JohnIJon, ·and through, several years· ago. altbQuah prac- and so far am not dbappolnt.ed.. Such fire chief; �Ua Ann GardUn, senl� h1ltorillUl, Vedla Hu..sebOe. PrMldent Tor­tice hours are .somewhat llmlted. minor things as tracking down stray' representative; Carolyn.- Hawley. junior vend expla.lned the work of the L. S. A.

Members of the squad are Gordon OanQ, teachers or claurooms, only add to the representative; Gerry Ol5on, sophomore CoWlCU. Two representatives, Dorotlly Oerh&rd Rosin, Ed. Brendt, IV&r" Plhl, Bob general air of excttement. (although rll repreaentatlye; and Afton Hjelm, frull- Rasmuaeen and Joan Satern, were elected

Nordeng, Russ Murray, Lee Fo!som, Ray much more 5leuthtng to do). A short meeting was held September The L. D. R. meets on�e each month at Brunner, Wa�n Jaech, and. Red Radln- Sept. If-The donnitory bears a strong 22 at which time rules and re8lJ..iations of the home of some faculty member. Mrs. Laraon, Ro� Larson, Walt Lopdon, Erl l feel qual1f1ed for FBI work if there 15 man representative. .. I to this poeIUon.

Uy-I'resemblance to a beehive, judging by the the dormitory were d15cussed bf M1&a J. P. Pflue(el' 11 the adytser.

PLC-ITES SKATE AT AWS ROLLER PARTY

fervent actlYity golnl on within It. I don't Blomquist. Dean of Women. A.. W, s. I know about the honey yet, but there's A skatinl party wUl be placed on .the The ornclal roster for the A.s8OClated . plenty of buzzing around. D. P. K. social calendar in the near future. Women Students 1nclud� the foUOWln, i Sept. 2O-AIthoUgh '1 feel that Freshman names: MlUion BoUman, president; Nora A good turnout of PLetta and their Composltion is taught fQr the purpose of FIRESI�E Kjesbu. vice-president; Janet Hauge, �-friends; attended the sk&t1na party spon- keeping Freshmen humbl�, I like all my Officers were elf"Cted at the fit'$t Fire- ret.ary·; Anit& Stuen, treaaurer, MJriam sored by the �ws at the Roller Bowl in subjects. The teachers seem to want to side· meeting of the year, held Sunday Hopp, advertl51ng manager; and .:Miss SouUl ·Tacoma last Friday night. Anna make Ule courses as interesUng as po&Sible. eveninK", september 24, in the reception Blomqu1st, adviser. Anderson and Eunice Tonend bo6sed the In case thi.s sounds as If I were lookJng room. GeraJdine Olson led in openln, de- The purpose. of the ol'l"an1utlon is to affair, Joan Satem and Dorothea otsiedal oyer the campus with rose-colored glasses, votlons, The roster includea Anna An- coordinate all the girls' activities on the has charge of the tickets, Betty Christen- let me put it in the record right now that derson, president; Gerha.rd Ro61n, vice- CampWl. Every tltrl attendinK" collelie a.u­

sen toot care of the transportation, Mlr- they're the same bright Kelly green that pre&ldent; Norene Sk.1lbred, secretary- tomatlcally becomes a member. The locaJ ·Iam Hopp managed the advert1S.1ng:, and any other Freshman wears treasurer; and Gordon Gano, fire-chief. \ A. W. S. b affiliated. with the National Miss Blomquist and Mrs. YOWlg kept an IYar P1hl was named in charge of Candle-)

organization. eye on the skaters. (ConUnuec\ lrom Pace 1) lighting for chapel, and Geraldine Olson The A. W. S. social calendar Includes �::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::. men and assistant to the preslde.nt. He and Eunice TorYend were elected LSA the annuBl sister tea In the fall, a Chr1lt-

DINNERS 6> STEAKS FOUNTAIN SERVICE

BLUE RUSTIC

received his A. B. degree at St. Olaf Col- repre:::enlatlyes. I mas party which ls given in connectJon lege and finished his Uleologtcal course with a project, and the high school tea at Luther Theologtcal Seminary. WOMENS A'I1lLETIC lin the spring to In�rest hilh school stu-

Mr. and Mrs. Nelson and their two Events sponsored by the Women's Ath- i dents in PacUlc Lu�heran College. The

Mounta.1n Highway end apartment tn the 14ain BuUdlng, of September. Mrs, Young, women'a ath- activity a month, sons. Paul and James, occupy the south letlc Association wlll star.t the last week 1 0rganlzatJon plans to provide one social

+---------'---'----+ I!P. � lettc director, urges all g1.rlil to turn ouL -------1---------------t This year the :::ports offered include VOl-I Delta.Rho Gamma under the leadership

Lundbe rg Drug PIPER FUNERAL HOME IleYball, basketball, captalnball, baseball, 01 Betty Clll'Utenson, preSident. and Nora -I tennis, badminton, and golf. Kjesbu, ylce-pre&1dent, gathered. for the 11830 PACIFIO AVE.. 5458 SO. P'UO)g" SOUND Turn out time ls Tuesday and Thurs-I first time this year in the Day-Room, OAr. MIS day afternoons from 3:45 to 5:00. Every Wednesda.y, September 13. Mildred Brod­PHON!: OR. 8518 girl who Is present regulB:.rJ>' ls a club land was elected. treasurer, Annle Lien,

+;:============::�IIi�-_=_=_=_=_=_=_:::_:::_=_=:_=_=_=_:::_:::_=_=_=_=_=_=::_::::; .... member, and a ietter can · be earned tor corresponding secretary, and Janet HaUle, If: 1 a year's parUcJpatJon In any sport. CeceUa record1nK" secretary. Mrs. Irene Ha�neq

SEARS, ROEBUCK with Alice Kaaland as yice-president. Or- Plans were made for the InstallaUon V V Gard.1Jn a.t I!�nt hea�s the organ1z&tlon was chosen as adviser. .

AND CO flcers for the oomlng year are to be I banquet wh1ch was held September 27. • elected soon. CO�chalrmen for the evening's enteH.a.l.n·

...... Broadway at 13th ....... During the year the W. A. A. sponsors ment were·Marian Butler and Anita Stuen-. � a cruise on Puget SOWld and. Ice skating I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:; Ip.'tles during the win", month'_ EASTJ'OLD MAKES T�IP

, President S. C. EMtvold returned this

FOR CHRISTMAS··· Your portrait--the lift that. qnly YOU can give

Portrait courtesy Miss Marallyn Myrick

Make your appointment with Rolland R. Lutz. artist in "Hilights and Shadows." Originator of "Shadowgraph" pOio,!rait_ Call MA. 4493,_

Over four hundred people last year were "too late" for X.mas portraits. Come earl y .this Yl!ar.

KRUG-LUTZ ' -STUDIO 762 B,,;adwa� MAin 4493

FORMER PRESIDENT JOINS LUTHER STAFF

Dr. O. A. Ttngelslad·, President of Pa­cific Lutheran College for the 15 years preceeding 1943, has been appointed. to head the Philosophy Department at Luth­er College, Decorah, Iowa. He wlU also assist In the Department of ReI1g1on.

week ·from a short trip to Eastern Wash­ington and Idaho which he made in the interest 01 the Golden Jubilee Campaign.

� I Victor's Marke t I • GROCERIES. MEATS. COLD STORA.GE LOCKERS

BROOKDALE OR. 8538 _ 0 Since his resignation here on July I,

1943, Dr. Tlngelstad has been doing 1ndoc-

��f£�g�r_:,i,_ '�_D!i lug received his B. A. degree there in 1905. . � _ � tP. -----'j Ii BROADWAY I McNe ss Products' " MOaR CO. " EXTRACTS, SPICES and II Specialised to Repairin, �

HOUSEHOLD PRODUCTS ti _ Standard ed Pric .. __ Ii . L. OVERLAND OR. 8720 '11 l::�!�:�= �� . . '1. ;''::=::::Il��M.

ALL THE GOODNESS

THE NAME IMPLIES HOM?C�NIZE@ /

. MEDOSWJai'i' IUIEJUIII.J' /

..

"

-I.

PAOEPOUR

F irst C� Prexy Has Active Caree r

PActPIC LOTHBlUN COI...L!:UE

r1-, PLC ON THE AIR .

\ - PLC is going on the air at a new hour 'and over a ditfe�nt station this year.

Choir. Looking Ahead To Interesting Year

FACULTY; STUDENTS MEET AT RECEPTION

n Replacing the daily 15 minute morning 54 members have been registered In the The PLC facul�y formally welcomed. this � _ m�urpr1sing � �.t ,e���l b�cas�er KTBI Is a half hOUT pro- Choir of the West out of 71 try-outs. year's students into the colleae family

�appenea to me w&.st.O" be electea stiiaent I gram every Sunday evenIng from- 8T30- whJeh-rnea.m-that-a eonsiderabl� part.--ol with-a-reoepl,Jon-beld-Wedneld.a,)t....aw ___ Body President." so I.n.s1sts Agnes Mylt- to 9 00 oYer KVI The greater coverage our student body is Interested In vocal lng. September 13. In the recreation room land. first girl to be chosen stdi:!ent body of the latt.er station together w:th the lmUSiC this year More than half of the Dean H 0 Ronnlna was master of president at PLC Agnes. who 1s a Junior, I advantage of the evening period as a group-23 girls and 7 boys---sang in last ceremonies for the short proaram Jlven

comes trom the lIWe town of IMaquah I listenlng hour Is the reason for the year s choLr by faculty members, In which President change The malE' section has tifteen volc�, aug- S C EastvoJd pve the welcom.1nC speech

She L"I following In her father's footsteps Prof G J Malmln is In ch.l.rge of mented by 5 alto-tenors Most of the boys l\4r8� Mabel Mets DUts, votce instructor' at by preparing to teach history and math-

I music for the programs and Dr S .C l in school tried out. and most of the try- I PLC, s&na' two solos, accompanied by Mrs

ematics in Junior HIgh School Because East\iold has been the speaker for the outs were prompUy accepted G J Yalmln The popular trio-label of tter desire to work With young people I first three programs. i The Golden Jubilee is: the fLrst of many Harstad, Eleanor Eutvokl, and. Ellu.beth

she decided upon this career. I I events that will require choLr part�clpa- Stuen-ang several numbers. They were

Presldent Mykland has participated in GOLDEN JUBILEE tion. Radio broadcasting over KVI wUI aceompanied by Mrs. RhOda- Younr.

many activities and held many offices I (Continued from Pap 1) be an Important part of the chOLr work. . here In the. last two years Among them I H. M. Normann of Arnegard, N. 0 .. Na- The plans to date call for a toUT of the

H . Kill d are: Fireside. vice-presiden�: LD.R .. vlce-' tional President of the W.M.F. of the N. North Puget Bound area In the spring. ugo Swanson e . president; VIIdng Club, secretary: Soph- I L. C. A .. and Dr. J. C. K. Preus. Proressor Malmin Is organizing an· op- In ·Airplane Crash omore representative' Board. of COntrol' Saturday. October 14, has been deslg- , tional Girls' Glee Club In which any girl· . and Saga editorial s�r. ' nated as Foundation Day, and will fea- I can take part. There WiU be two rehearsals Hugo Swanson, ex '43, former football

ture the annual fall "Homecoming." Dor- week during the lunch hour. star and co-captain of the P&ciflc Luth-Agne-; enjoys music. especlally singing othy Nieman and Anna Anderson are co-' eran gridiron squad' of 'U-'43 berore !rO-In the choir and playing the piano. A good chairmen or this student-sponsored event. Ing into the Army Air COrps, wu killed

game of golt also does not come amiss. The Honorable Arthur B. LangUe. Gover- Big Sisters Treat I while on duty at an advance trainlng �ed w�� sht liked �e best. our ener- nor of the State of w ashington, 9o'1ll be LI.ttle SI.sters at Tea

statton In Flo:rida, June 18. g e c pre en prompt y responded, "I the speaker at the evening banquet. ! After completing prelIminary tra.1nlng like �ple who like to do Student Body Events of the final JubIlee da.y will The "Big Sisters" of· P. L. C. gave

I and recelv1ng his commlssJon Hugo was work.

begin at 8:00 a. m. SUnday, October 15. their "little sisters." the freshmen. a I assigned to the Panama Canal Zone where

fIE:::: :::::: .......... :: .......... ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::� I with a communion service at the College I friendly welcome In the form of a tea he was stationed for Illmoat. 8. yea.r. He

!� H I qhurch. Dr. J. C. K. Preus will deliver I sponsor� by the Associated Women Stu- was then sent back. to the states for .. RAYMOND ELECTRIC CO. glthe sermon at the 11:00 O'cl9Ck service. dents in the recreation room. Thursday advanced night combat flying. Before

813 PACIFIC AVE. g Speakers at the c1os.1ng Sunday after- afternoon. September 14. b.ls death he was training With a speclal

i: BRdw,. 1712 :: ;:�d��I�� t��) U�IV��lt�f ����

e:-, Installation of new officers was held :;:; �f,:I�::

Pl!:rs�t

e�tm=��;!

:: ton In Seattle.' Dr. R. Franklin Thomp-with Mildred Reese. last year's A.W.S. of flying. The group was headed by Cot Ii:::::::: ... ......... . ........ :: ................ ::::::::::. son, President of the College or Puget President. now teaching In Tacoma, as Allen (mentioned frequently in the book. '!!'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''� Bound In Tacoma, and Dr. S. C. Eastvold. �::llIn����I�er.�:�.

Off��e��::�; "God Is My CO-Pll�t .. ) and flew the

S E L D E -N' S First in Floor ·Coverinp

OCCASIONAL FURNITURE

LINOLEUM _ RUGS SHAD� - BEDDING

DRAPERIES

President of Pacific Lutheran College. Nora KJesbu. Treasurer Anita Stuen, Sec-newest Mustangs--P-51·s. The plane Hugo

Professor G. J. Malmin will direct the retary Janet Hauge, and Advertising-rdan-was flying crashed during a vloleift: elec-

Cph

"'on

0lry.

0ln

' thth

' .

wlr

est and the Lidurln

ttle .

sym- ager Miriam Hopp. trl

���:� e

:����r;! l�t =:�

fl!:� appearance the M9 Grace Blomquist, advlEer of A.W.S .. held In Tacoma on July 1. ii Jubilee days. _�� the new girls and Introdu�eQ as l

j=== ==== =====�

.. the program speakers Mrs. S. C. Eastvold. I I • i! ..I,. ,1 QUALITY KNITTING CO.

934 COMMERCE

wife of President Eastvold. and Mrs. K. A. Holstad. new assistant dean of women

',and house mother. "Let Your Light Shine" : was the theme of Mrs .. Eastvold's talk.

BROOKDALE LUMBER CO. Mountain Highway

BROOKDALE, WASH.

::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::� w ____________ ..J !��: H:�::l�::d:· �:r:I:�O

t:: .. -------_______ iIl t------------'--'-----�--------"i

I"Vlennese Waltz" by Chenoweth. played

JOHNSON & ANDERSON I by Miriam Hopp. and two ,ooal "Ieotlons TRIC KS· JOKES - MACIC

Neal E. Thorse n

r ..

GRAIN ETC. GROCERIES - FLOUR - HAY On the Mountain Highway .Parkland. Wash.

ANDERSON LUMBER COMPANY 9802 PACIFIC AVENUE

GRanite 7311

SPORT CLOTHES FOR GIRLS and BOYS VISIT OUR NEW DEPARTMENT

Washington Sports Shop OWNED BY

Washington Hardware Co. .918 PACI.FIC AVENUE

I presented by Isabel Harstad. accompanied by Mrs. Rhoda Young. Ursula MacDonald. graduate of P. L. C .• now �achlng in Parkland, gave the girls some advice on college lire, Group singing under the dl- I

Costumes - Tuxedos - 8erpenltbn 9261,i Broadway MA.ln 4861

reetlon of Mat{lon Soltman and Ruth [jI' .. ----:----------.<il Jensen concluded the program.

COmmittees for the tea, appointed at an officers' meetlng in Seattle during the summer, were as follows: Lunch Commit­tee-Nora KJesbu, Annabelle Blritestal, lnga Johnson, Lillian ThorleifSQn, Allee Kaaland. Ardis Severson; DecoraUons-Anita Stuen, Agnes Mykland; Eunice Towend; Clee.n-up Committee - .:Janet Hauge, Barbara Newton, Ruth Jensen, Ruth Towe, Margie Carlson; Program­Marian Boltman. Miriam Hopp, and Betty Christenson.

RAU'S CHICKEN DINN ER

INN ORCHARD HRL

on Spanaway Bus Llnt:

SKATE AT

THE RO LLER BOW} S�UTH TACOMA WAY __ J

� LOW NET COST . llre Insurance is issued to Lutheran Men, Wom­en, and'" Children ages from birth to 65. 'Ibe �em.bers of Lutheran BrotherhOOd own the so-­. c1ety, e.nc;l they alooe re­cetve th<e

'

eani1:zic&. 'Jhere are no StoCkhold­ers.

LUTHERAN BROTHERHOOD BUILD YOUR EST A TE*: NOW! /\

Legal Re8erfle Lile Iruurll1JCe lor Lutherans JIONNBSOTA

I'aoific Luth ... n Collet- h,.d.nd, W .. hi...-YOUR' FUTURE STARTS TODAY

---- -_ . . _._- - ---

VOL. 22

. Jubilee Is"ue

__ L222 ___ ____ . No. 2

FORMER PLCite s College Heads; Past and Present PLC Celebrates TO BE WELCOMED . AT HOMECOMING Golden Jubilee ·

Bo'rroWlng quaInt dresses from obliging I . ancestors. homecomers. Including alumni GOV. Langlie to Speak. students and fMends, w1l1 begin festivl- A S d ties with a parade n�xt Saturday. October I alur 8y Ban'luel 14. �gtnning at 12:� p. m. the parade, ! PLC's Golden JubUee Day� oPen� last. with all Its horse and buggy trappings. , night with a apecial "Rally 8esa101\ (or wtu wend Its way about Parkland, re- i Pioneers" at. the College church. 'nre minding inhabitants of the Golden JubUee Rev. O. L. Haavlk, ps.ator of Ballard Pint· which climaxes 50 years of our existence ! Lutheran Church, Seattle. was chairman 8.S a school. Chalnnan of this event is for the evening. The Bev. 8. J. R Ylvi:-Dorothy Rasmussen. saker. pastor of Our Savior's Lutheran

The front hall or "Old Main" wlll be Church, Stanwood, delivered an address· the scene or an inronnal tea beginning 'on "Ohristlan Education on the� Pacini: at three. At this time lhe dormitory Coast through FUty Yel!-rs." rooms will be open ror inspection. Hostess- The Rev. Carl H. 8kndgre�. putor of es will be 10 the halls to greet the visitors Gethsemane 'LuUleran Church, 8ea.tUe, and show them through the bUilding. was chaIrman for this morning's exercises.

SC:deu1e�mf:�

a! : 30�0;:t::i�e

grve:

ai�qut'h

te' Dr. S, C. Eashold • . prtRnt ad- and Dr. Carl A. V. Lund of Gresham,

er a.nd. tlnt prftldent or the then mlnlstrator of Pacific .Lutheran Oregon, President or the Columbia Con-College Dining Hall. Anna Anderson and called heirlc' Lutheran University, CoUere, rerence, Augustana Synod, gave the de-Dorothy Neiman have charge of the pro- votlonal address. At the 10:30 meeting gram, which will be announced by Toast- .

V I G C SS S IT t.he Rev. A. R. M. Kettner, Palltor of mist ..... Agnes Mykland. E EN N LA EL orve nd, Larson Luth., Memorial Chur,h. Taooma, .. rved

Greetings will be brought by A,tlng GET UNDER WAY Ele cted Saga He ads .. ,hAlrman, and the Rev. E. C. Knorr. Mayor V. Fawcett, and Mrs. C. C. Pratt, _ pa.8tor or Queen Anne Lutheran Chtp'ch, Head of the Presidents' Council of Ser- Courses In English, Speech, Education, Eunice Torvend and Bob Larson will Seattle, spoke on "A Sociological APPT08.ch vice OrganltatIOn!,. OtLs Grande. '38. now

I History. Physical Education and Art are be this yenr·, Saga edlto, and busln ... to Problems of l"amUy Adjustments," director of PhYSi� EduCJltloh at the offered In the evening classes which be- manager, the ballot box revealed after after which a dl&cusslon was held. Y. M. C.' A., will bring greetings from the gan thLs week. Classes Rre held weekday ye.sterday·s \'otlng. PrflIS to Speu' Alumni Brier messages 'will be brought evenings from 7 15 to 9 15 P m or 8atur- Eunice; a. junior in the liberal arts dl- This afternoon's program beglna a.t by visitors and rrtends 1 day mornings from 9 30 to 11 30 a m vision from Silverton Oregon, has been 2:00. with Dr. H. L. POM, President of the

MU61c wlll be furnished by Grace and POUcriHng is a lISt o[ course ofrerlngs l

active In campus

.

artalrs ..

She.

served paclfl.

c District of' the N. L. C. A., acting Rpmohr Oul4!Y@. I�e lentz end the, £-&1'* .!n;,,- Con�tery JUerghlrf!..... _ la ... L � LDg_ .�rer_ ....yI A . � ::to- .hH>·rnQn pnd PI' J C K pr,,,, .Pl­orchestra. 1 A study of the main trends In recent , �entatlve. AWS pUblicity manaKer, 8oph. rector or Education, N. L. C. A., MJnne-

c1os1ng a tightly packe4 schedule. the : E!nelish and American literature. Thr�e OJ86S preaident, an:d played one of the apolls, deUverlng the main addreu on homecomers will repair to Trlnll-y Church ; cr��J!. hpurs. Dr. Herbert Ranllon, �urs-

�I��ng roles In Ule aU-school play "Christian Higher Education Between

at 8 o'clock, where they wUl listen to a ' day evening. ! "Brother Goose." TflU: yeai'" Eunice Is Yemrday- and-Tomorrow," �'l'biI- eYen1n&-._ .. speech by Washington's Governor ArthUr II Speech 110: Dramatic Production. BMlc LOR pre81dent and has charge of the stu- at 7:45 Mr. A, A. Mykla.nd, Supt. or Public B. Lal)glle. H15 subject is "The Place or principles of producing and directing dent chapel programs. Schools at Issaquah, wlll be chairman and the Chrlsttan College In our Democracy." i plays. Make-up, acting. orgRnLzatlon, Robert Larson. second half rreshman the Rev. R. C. Burke, . Preaident, Call-

I1ghtlng, scenery. costumes. One or t.l\'0 from Tacoma, attended PLC In '43 and romla Conference, Auguatana Sync;K1, LoIS

e{lHfiNg 8veNts , credit hours. Mrs. Carol Ladwig Johnson. left to serve in the army. Bob's rather, Angeles. California., wlll dlsCusa "What the ! Thursday evening. the Rev. E. A. Larson Is the Instructor In Church Expects or the Christian COllege." I (Continued on Pare ') Swedish at PLC.-' W M F Day Thursday, Oct. 12-Meetings at 2:00 p. ;0�;" 5 p. m .. followed by dIscussion i WHEN THE

Friday, October 13, mlsht be called'

GOOD, OLD DAYS WERE NEW '·Ladlee· Dny'· because the momln. and j ., afternoon sessions are under the a�-Friday, Oct. 13-Morn1og and afternoon

sessions under auspices of W.M.F. of ! the NLCA. I Sa�. Oct. It-Foundation Day. Home- II coming Ba.nquet In College Dining Hall at 5,30. . I Address by the Hon. Arthur B. LangUe, governor 'of the state of Washington, at 8:00 p. m. La TrlnJty ,Church.

-8u1\lI&y. ·Oet. 15-8:00 It: in . . co�un1on Ser:vtce. in College .cl?-urcl\. 9:3O ·

·a.. m,' Youth seni� at church. 11:QO a. m. Co:nvention. service. . I _ 3:00 p. m. Clo&1na session at 'I'rlnl-ty ; Church. Dr. Lee · Paul Bles, Dr. &.1 Pra.nklln Thompson, and Dr. S� C. Eastv9ld, spea.ke!,$.

Friday. Oct. �Fre6hman class Hayride .. Sat1ll'day, lkL !l--Sent�r cla.ss party ror

; .... student body, 8.:00 In the recre�tiori

EASTJ10LDS ENT�RT AIN STUDENTS;A,,.T HOME

P. L. c. BoPhom·ores. JunJon, and Seniors were the guests or Dr. and Mrs.

Ec;lYtn 'I'lqelstad. proreMOr in edu­cation, now on leave at �LC. Wal rradaated from PLC in Ute rood old day. - - - 1909 '1.0 be eaact • - - wben course. bOre f�dable UUes, atDdy . bours were I�P.I" a.nd rirorous. and . eampa actlvU.les consisted �D'" of . IJ&etary Lea.pea; and de�Unr 50-deU.es. Yoar ed.Iton uked him to

. "remember back wben" &s a .�Ial holDecoa:Iln&" aDd GoIdt-n Jubllee rea­ture. Re're' It la. and we hope you'D enjoy It u' mucb .. we did.

S: C_ Eastvold last Sunday eve�g, alter I "One, Two; One, Two"-"WrIl!t leads; the P. L. C. radio program. Dr. Eastvold wt1at leads." " Roll on, thou deep and dark gave Ii short w8leom1ng talk ' which wu blue ocean; ROLI.." "Great is Diana or followed b)' �group .. . �. testimon1a.l.s, the Epheslansl" 'Yes, I can hear him �d

. informal talki &Ild .. �tJng." The fresh· see him yet.. that dtgn11'led, stem. yet men were entertained at the President's Itlndly and JUlt teacher of oU1'5 a.way �eDOe the previOU5. S� · evening. bact there thirty-five YM ' ago as he

plcell or the South puget SOund Circuit struggled In h15 elocution class to strike

of the Women's Missionary Federation of a fa10t spark from our un1magtnattve the N. L. C. A. with the W. M. P. met:n­souls 'or to drill a. trifle of grace into our bers of the three cooperatlns 'Synoda as clumsy movements. And again I see him guests. MrR. P. �. HoU o� Tacoma, P;r;eS�-����c

f��:e��

y :���;

r:!P���

e� dent, South Puget Sound C1r�w�, wl� :� chalnnan for the day,. , ,RegtatratiOP �-

�:!le

:':I�I:al�=� �=� :�!i�hi: gins at 9:80 a. m.,. followed �y the �p..-ing sermon brought by the Rev. Carr E.

vest, reverently reading the SCripture.s to j us on Sunday. mornings in his beautUul voice which he Used with such artistrY.

Rydell, pastor •. FirSt i.�P.l'� �t�· . Augustana. Bynod. Tacoma· �e b�� . Raslon will ·be.gIn a.t , 10:15 Ii.' �i., �� "!':t

And once more I hear h1m as he 'exhorts ll:OO Mrs. H. M. .No�n of ��d, " us to use our ttme dllJgenUy, to refrain North Dakota, President of the Women's rrom conduct unbecOming ChrIstian young

(COUUDaed. on Pale .) men and women, or deep In one of those . � • . ' ." : ,

intimate talks which lett on ·the young an Impression never to -be rorgotten. S.Jd�s. ·t� 'Make. �y ,

; ' .� .' . s...... Can aud ""....... �--\.I th M· ··Sh· 8· . Yes. the Old Main was newer and in e e OOD. m�. · · ·

better repair back in l909; � pra1rl'1' At ntton haysea.teral � ba.Yrld�, .spoo-I were open to wander where fancy listed!; so by the freahmen, will be 00 the t.h.e--o!d lItreet car -:attled noLsUy with� calendar for Prtday, October. 20. 'J'h!8. wID

sinuous turns to 'Tacoma, "The City 01 be an authentic Jaunt w1th �. hay Destiny"; Seattle beclwned to Its Alaska and wagons. 'The Wqo"" ,...w I�ave � Yukon Pacific Exposition; the Plyer and campus at 4:30 en route to Lake S�·

the Indlanapolls plowed their watery fur- a.way, where a .wemer a.nq marshmallow rows exposition-ward ; Oregonians risked roast will be' the order. of the eVen1n&",

riding the. train to Tacoma. despite its Faculty guests wUl tte. M1sa ,B��, plunge ,unto the old Kalama.-Ooble ferry; Mrs. Young, and '.Mrs. JohnaOn, Comm1� young: pastors came' froUl their· scattered tees In charge of uie bayfeat are Naomi lJttle COUDtry .par1B.hes to viait "Parkland �I 'and Roy lAu'aoo.. ;tranapor1.f.t.1on;. .stolen"; ladies' aids put on lut.ef1ak sup- Lois ToWeldt and. Ardys Brecivold. ,tOC¥l; pen for the benefit of "our dear· :schOOl," Alma Heen aJld. Arno St.elno. UckeY; and t.he sptrlt of sacrlt1ee burned brtahtly Telma Metzger. pubUcI�y ;' aJSC1 !var �.

(ContiDaed. 011 Pap -I) leneral cha.lnnan. . /

�� IRonnl1g Slast IW,ith the ---It .

l liiu�ui " _ � _ _ _ lbe ocbool "" b1 I' ,I: • (J. i/'JI;',,,,,, """"': =::. '" PocItIc ;_� .. . 11 ! """II",(S IN ,,(fVICe c .... _ Lund, ex '2'1, to IHchlD& In"

bia'IIJUbb pal -"lM- per-Y:'-�---------i'-- - duatrtal Arts at the Enumcl.... B.h

Bb.tenrd. as eecood ca. matter, � 2. Ita. at the � I: trewaadriiii or v ...... x: B'!'PP. ex 'U:- School. He' .. nt n ��.-

omce at PaztiI.Dd. W� under ibe Act of La Pfe. Vernon A. Hopp. �ed. Det. 1l5e M. M . .. short time &Co. Karch S. 1171. . [I Enar. Combat Bn .. Camp Pollt, La. .

_ Early In September. II1aa Eunice" liIae

EDITORIAL STAFF ! Bob Newton. ex '43. 1s now staUoned In Cline of Puyallup became the brtcSe/ of

CO-EDITQRS . CB BBUDIE : MLssourt. Address: pte. Robert A. Newton. Ke!'J1ltt H. I>uB01., UBNR. ex '402. The .. . . ........ ....... .. . ................ ANITA. STUEN. ALl 1 39214009. Co. A .• BO BTR, Camp Crowder couple are maklna lhetr home In Berkeley

Aaociate Editor ..... 11leodore Relt. · M1M9url. .

whUe he 11 awaiUnl" orders. AdViaer . . .............................. .Mrs Ruth Franck 01&1 1Iace--. ex '31, is In. the n-&In- Joanna ManOU8Ol. who received het Reporters: Vtrglnla Isveek. Daphne Hellman. Helen Anderson. Ardya Bredvbld. Telma Ing Section of the navy. Addreu: Lt. 01> B. A. t.hia aprina, but who tln1ahecl the

Metzger, Beryl Berpn, Anita Roth, Ruth Johnson, Lou1se Tollteldt. T. Olal Hqeneu. 335481, Director ot normal course here at PLC in Ina, 're-T:ra1n1ng Commandant, Navy Number laB. cently became the brtde of John C.

BUSINESS �'�'GER

BUSII'II"'ESS ST� I Fleet Post Office, San Francl..sco, Calltor- TBapralla ot the arm,. medJcal coipa.. 8he .nn..!.. .... . ......... . ..... DOROTHY NIEMAN : nla. ' .aa liven In marrtap by her brother.

AssLstant Manager . ....... Ma.rtan Butler ! Address ot Lee Storaaall, ex '44, la 811C, Anaelo J. Manouaoa •. ex '36, of Seattle. At

BusJness Secretary . Inga Johnson I MTB Com Row, JI;90912t, c/o P'leet Post PLC Joanna wu active on the campua ....... I Office 7th JI'leet, San Francisco, Calif. and�ld many ottlcn In student orpnl-Advertising Manager . . ... ... .. . .. ...................... , . . Corinne Erickson I Nonnan Jenaen, ex '44, was able to at (jOni. CIrculation . . ....................... Cecella Gardun 'j tend part ot the Junior mixer on Be � Harold P. Gray, '31, 11 now a �einber Servicemen's Circulation ................ Annabelle� Blrke6tol l ber 29 while <.Kl leave. Addresa: onnan ot the staff or the Pierce County School Exchange Orace Btrkestol l Jen.sen, D 1O6 ASNR. Lym all V-12 I office. He haa . been appointed Pierce

Solicitors: Margie Carlsen, Grace Gulhaugen. Rumohr Gulhaugen, Joselyn Lynne, Unit, Walla Walla, Wn. County fUm lIbrartan on a part:-Ume

Ruth Bjerkan. and Naomi Trussell. S� hili Polliio. ex '43, tormer Pacl!lc I baa1s and he 11 a1lo a member ot the

Adviser : Lutheran College tootball and basltetb&ll I C.lover Park teaching staft.

.

.. . .. . ... . 0. J. Stuen ' star, was wounded In action In France I John Johnson, '31, resigned hla �-____________________ .,._------- September 13, according to a letter re. tion at McKenna and la 'now principal at

I celved trom him by Coach CUft Olson. €learlake School. .

?' /" C' A,I II� 1 J � , Paul said. that he WIUI hJt In the lett leg Mrs. Johrulon (Emma Kaaland. '31) and \.InCIJ UI In'C W�'11 above the knee but that til; .... wound ap husband have a turkey farm In Burllng-U . peared. to be healing all ¢ght He also ton.

The ye,ar is 1890. A m�n thoroughly I MeanwhUe Columbia College was tound- i expressed the desire to /feturn to "the John Laragaard, 'oW. and Juleen Mat-

good old USA In the not,. too distant tu tern, 'tt, are studying at Luther Theologl­convinced that Christian educatJon is the ed at Everett, Wa..s.tUngton. by the United I ture." Address: Sgt. Paul Pollllo, 19145997, cal Seminary, St. Paul. Johnny wu lut cornerstone of democracy comes to the :��:=

s =�ra

t�e�:��b:� �8��:: ; Co. H.. 16th Int .. APOI, c/o PostlIUlBter ye.ar's student body president.

West. He is the Reverend Bjug A. Har- For eight years these two schools were i New -:ork, New York. . Lelf C. Klippen, '33, returned to the

stad. a builder and a man of visIon. One operated by their respective church bodies, Two uniformed ex PLCltes were vLsltors educational system thla tall and Is the

of his granddaughters, Isabel Harstad, but In 1917 the groups united. This led l :t the campus last. Friday and the tlrst principal ot Collins Grade School. " \ Is with us now. to the amalgamation ot the t.wo Institu- : w thIS week-Harty, Hoff, ex '43, and Erwin Da.mmel, '37, also returned to

�e Reverend Harstad was sent. from tlons and In 1918�19, the students of Pa- I aldo Eletson. ex '43. Harty was a former teaching this fall. He Is teaching at. Mid­

Minnesota to aid In establishing a Chris- cltlc Lutheran Academy were transterred I �rt.s editor and tea.\ure writer for the land. Mrs. oammel, "35, La Charlotte

tlan school on the Pacific Coast. At a to Columbia: College. The next year both I oorlng Mast. He Is now on an amphlb Gottschalk.

conterence In Seattle a site In Tacoma schools were' ClO8ed. pending permanent I IOUS tIying ship which dtrect.s the am Rev. Lloyd Rot!, '35, I.s pa.stor at First --. � ____ . -. \ft. PIrOp<&" locatton. unlnca.tlon. ' I phlblous operations during an invasion. PresbyterIan Church, Port Angt!Ie3, Wash.

Also In 1890 the Pacific Lutheran unl- 1 TIle new school. Pacltlc Lutheran Col- . Addres&es are: Ensign.H. L. Hott, USNR Earl Ahrena, ex ·tt, and hla wife lett

versJty Association was incorporated, with I lege, began In· 1920 with the Reverend J' I USS EldO�do (AGe-II), c/o Fleet Post this summer for South Afrtca as mis­Rev. Harstad as president. Construction I' U Xavier (protessor emeritus here since Office. san Prancl.s"co, Callt., and Sgt stonarles. �'as begun In Macch, UWl, at Parkland, 19'42) as acting president. Professor Xavier Waldo Elefson, ASN 19145760, Bks. 16, Mllng Sannerud, '28, lett for South which at that time consisted of a single I' has put In more years ot service at P. L. C. �ed. Sec. SCSU 1136, CUshing Oen. Has America on August 5. He went for the house, the one now occupied by our engi-' than any other man. 1 p tal, Framingham, Mass. Olin Corporatlon as assistant to the con­neer. T. H. Olson. Transportation to the I In 1921 the Reverend Ola J. Otdal as- Latest address ot 0" Dabl, ex '43, is En sultant engineer to help conatruct an " blg" city was chiefly by horse and buggy, sumed the presidency. It was during this sign o. F. Dahl, ,uSNR, 209 Venetian Ho aluminum plant in Ouro Freta. BrazU. but a street-car line to TacOma was in I time that the Normal Department was tel, Naval Training Center, Miami, Flor Mrs. Sannerud is t.eachlng at Parkland the making. TIlis was the line that was placed on the accredited. l1.st. Ida. Orv Is receiving addltlonal training Grade School. ., recently supplanted by the now famUiar I Dr. O. A. Tingeistad came to Pacltlc toUowlng the completion ot midshipmen's Otis J. Grande, '38, wu recently named ·'bus." Lutheran College In 1928. Among . many school. "Y" PhysJcal Education Director to re-

The cornerstone of Old Main was laid other innovations, he lnaugurated the Pa- Word of t·he promotion of Charles L place F'el1x Mantell, former director. who on October t, 1891. and three years later. clflc Lutheran College Development Asso� Snelson, ex 't3, trom sergeant to staft resl.gned to join the U. S. Navy. Otis was October 14, I8!K, the building was dedl- clatlon with the slogan "At. least one dol- sergeant reached the college last week.. active in athletics. eapec1a.l1y in football cated In the presence ot about two thou- lar at least once a year." Our present. ed- I

Sgt. SneLson is ball turret gunner on a and Intra-mural sports. He had. been sand people. , ucatlonal standard was reached under Dr. I Flying Fortress that has been bombing teaching tor the past a1x years, the last

Mr. �N. J. Hong 'became president in Tingelstad's directton. costal detenses and supply lines In sup two In Tacoma. Orande waa president ot H1I8. Times were hard and the respoml- Last �r waa Dr. 8. C. Eastvold's first port of the Ailled Invasion ot France the PLC student body during his senior b1Hty great, but rather than see the year .:wlth us. Under his guidance. material I (Anyone having hls address please tum year In 1937-38. He waa ma.r:Tled. to Val-school discontinued., Mr. Hong and two 1 gains have been abundant. and Pacific it in). .

-, bart Norby. '36. In 1940.

other tell,chen carrted. on the next year Lutheran College J.s looking torward. to R&y Kapas. ex· :43. was recelitly set to without ' ttnanc1al ass1Btance trom the I fruitful years ahead. go overseas when laat minute orders come Board. Oradually tJ.mea improved. and in Much has been accompllshed by these through reta�g him. in this country lau PacUic 'Lutheran Academy, aa .the [' pioneers who have marked. ott fltty years IndeflnJtely, Addreas: .Cpl. Ray Kapua llIjUne had DOW become, was t!}Ily accred1- of Protrress. Much remains for u.s to do. as 19123353, 514th PA Bn., Port Bn.gg, North

ANDERSON CROCIRY _ w-. ' GR.,,, . , SCBOOL BU1'P1B8 aDd

BO _ __ _ ted." in all Ita departments. : the heirs ot their taith iDd v1&1oo. I Caroltna. Bill ·Kamatact. ex '�" .lIeutenant in the

We wish to exprea.s our �arttelt aym- I CllAPEL QUOTES air COrp4, son ot Prof. Ramstad, was hOme �============:! pathy to Mrs. Carol Ladwig Johnson, up- "The Cbr1at1an rellglori isn't a product for a ahort vtait laat week. His father • on the death ot her brother. Lt. Loran R. l of our own beings, It Ian't a product ot vlaited him in Texas several weeks ago Ladwig. Lt. Ledw1&. U, 8. Marine Corp l our own emotlona. but' It ia a histortcal at the time he reCeived his wtnp. '

I the Pacltlc area. , "We do not want to put our taith In ALUMNUS WED IN SEATl'LE .

COllEGE HAl RCUTS PARKLAND IARIIR

C. R . . MARSH

Reserve. waa recently kUled .in acUon in 1 thing tb.&t haS taken place 1.J;I. the hiatory

I B ute on .something that Is ' as urustable aa Helen Westby. '29, became the �rtdee

l Mrs. Mary W. Hong. 78, ot Parkland: the emotiona ot man." of Albert WindeU last June 24, Tbey te� widow of Nllii J. Hong, tor-nJr preSIdent -rroteaaor A. W. Ra.m.stad. marrted 10 Pirat Lutheran ChUrch In 'Pi. I'�============:! of Pacltic Lutheran College, died. last·week ;',In OCder to advance our church, the coma by Rev. A. W. Ramatad. Attendan� ' j . In a local ·hospital after an extended lll- k1ngdom of God must be with us. Let the were a alater. Mn. Alfred Alii (Eather ness. ' l ap1rtt of Chrlst en", 'OW' Uv .. and then Weatby '32), ...... Kenneth Jacoba (stella IERCLAN!) HARDWARE CO.

Professor �\ was bead of the Eng- let' the Church of God unite." Samuelaon; ''28),. Mrs. Arlin, Bannerud � PAdiPto Usb department here for .se'Vjeral yeara _ . -Rev. B. H. Svenson. (Vtctorta. Raamuuen '28) , and Mrs. OlaI .

before his retirement..at � .... close of the Member. of Da.nish Lu�ran Church of Haaeneu (Irene Dahl '30) . ; OR:. · � school year 1938. He died. five yean 810. 'America. .

I ;==::=====::::==:! "'lbere .I.s only one power that can really Skippy. complete ' with ta11w.p and a 1 � Mrs. Prank Lorenz (Lou1&e WllUam. '37) make the world better met that 'is the frlendly canine em11e. 1a uaually &mona ' ' .

became the m�r of a baby·,boy-,D July. )�� �i�,��ii'��:r!4te power that those preaent when lncqan1c cbem1atry � ,... waa. eftIoe ....... The new _val is named Rlehanl. C&n_tnnsfonn man." claM mee .. each 1DOl'Illn&'. He obOuJd be C" FRI!.�t!.lm

.NslN

'l'belma ,'Ibureson, '42, is now teaching at 'Puy&uup, Wash.

.� only way to bapptneas 15 hO� able to .plnch hit tor .... hIs .Dl&Iter, Pro- .,. ... TlUlliilt:aI and hoUn ... Is I .. own n!wanl," fe.aao, Ramstad. l1000. IIjI he bas falth- �) , .:.....�eaaor j. p� Pfluepr . .i tully attended. the cJa.sa for several y.,.. :. �.1� .� Aft. � ...

/

OctOber 12, 1", -

. ��!:Y�� AT P�::..Ct:���L:'!!. JKampus -Komb�gsl\ ,CII!: �j��':�O:'b behind Harstad'll vision in the young Weat worti.ng bome&-8uch were the Influences Betty Hoyt ... aeen praetlcJna for the OU join ' tl SUr- well onl� a few � removed. from W�;. whleh bound us tosether. loe abt1nc party by dolna a fancy f� a VO�-:!_:ll m�:,.!� ne oC tun and ton s year of statehood. 'I'be Ute CIt a St __ lll ��nt on me W'axea 1I�� m . �e �' troUc and what have yOu rot? One period Faellll7 Makes Gr.&at � We were · 182 !t.rona" In that ynr of Pall �wn and � �' Betty., of P. E., obviously, at PLC. . SWl u memories come back, it was 1908�09. a ·goodly number conslderin& that The P. E.. clauea have been enpcinC' in. the men and women of the faculty who up to that date the Aeackmy had produced Cecllla tBts) Oardlln, one of those the most rip�roar� volleyball p.mea re-made the greatest impression. Pint or all. only 118 graduates since Its open:lng In scarce seniors at P. L. C� spent a week's

corded. In hlatory. It', Just. ooe bta happy Principal Hone, but scarcely - less the 1894. The first of these, Ettie Kraabcl vaca.tlon In Chinook, Washington. vlalUI'lI

famUy of screechlnl, scrambUna ctrll.

others: Rev . . 0. E. Helmdahl, who made (now Mrs. Vigo Jurgensen) was gradu� her b.rother, Ernest., · home on furlOUlh 'l1le ruth period cl ... 11 made up al� the Bible live In hb cla.saes; handsome ated In 1898. We of 1908-09 came from from a year's · service in Ala.ska: Cec1lla', most enUrely of freshmen. In t.he mtdat of A . 8. Peterson, dean of men, and young as far away a.s Alaska, Callfornla and brother. John, also servlnc In Alaska, wa.5[ a pme the rumor bepn, "�, we're

enough himself to laugh at an innocent North Dakota. Included were many from a student at P. L. C. in 1930. malting too mueh noLle. We aotta re� prank; wh1ms1cal J. L. Clary, one time Parkland, some of them the "Oladlators" • • • member we're In claas." The pb . pro� attorney and chatauqua lecturer. hater of their day. I can stlli see OUver Har� Believe It or not-A horrible monster, a res5ed in depresa1nr &lIenee, Until Mrs.

of wms, who held that "when a man la stad carrying the basketbaU up the WaI l saint., a murderess, Iond a. Witch were re· Youna se� that aomethina WU 1.m1aa. dead he Should keep stW;" kindly M1!.s of the lttUe cra.cker�bOx gym in two lonl l cently seen walking down the halls �ere "You girla know there'. no rule apinat Bertha Hoverstad, dean of women, arrayed strides, 'or "Toriy" Brottem dOing my.� at P. L. C.I But dor:a't be ala�t;d, folks; t&lklDl, don't you?" And then the flre� in beautiful ur voluminous). sUk dl'e5Se3, terious things with a ball and bat. Yes, It's Just the drama.� class �ng a try �t worka 1J:epn! deeply concerned about the welfare of her there were heroes in . those daya-tlnd I character make�up. 80 in the future don t The .P. E. classes wiah to take thla: op. girls; sprightly Anna Tenwlck, later a heroines too. Those poor girl Iraduates. 1 � shocked if you see Lady MaeBeth ex�. portunlty to eXpress their apoloctes to the heroic China mts.s1onary. who struggled to heroically going through the tortiu'ea of a I changing campus gossip with Saint Ber� Instructors and studious studes in the help the newcomers � th_�* "J's" and program of speaking or music all alone, nadette. • • • cllLSS rooms down .below. '·W's"; Alma Ha�. �""'!fpy tempered. a requirement for graduation. The bash� THUMP I CRASH! BANO I plano teacher and o� of the best in t� ful country boy speaking hls first piece I Upperclassmen can tell some tall tales, Urst fifty years; In ... Hong, typing and at the weeltly Lyceum programs was but they can't make the Frosh beUeve

PLC TO MEET LINCOLN stenography. teacher. 'tIO enthusiastic about scarcely less heroic, neither was the o(!w that It was the wind that rolled those perfecUng her technlq'ues that she busied caslonal disciplinary defender who faced 1 coke bottles down the hall-overturned IN GRID CONTEST hen;elf In church taking Norwegian ser· the faculty In their Just wrath. And how that bed---e.nd articulated that blood.� PLC's wartime Irh1sters have been hard mons In shorthand; and sympathetic Dr. about the untutored student who faced I curdllnl scream Monday night. Memories at it for four weeks, and now their first L. J. Rynnlng, college phY3ician. patient his fi�t chol� of the five courses, Normal' l

of Initiation day �re .st�l too fresh! game with the Lincoln H!gh second string

to the last with the minor ailments. of College Preparatory. Luther College Prew I • .18 scheduled for Friday afternoon on our student farm youth who had simply �aten para tory ; Commercial, Stenographic. And I Afton Hjelm left last Monday for Sew field. too much. And. whUe not on the faculty, how cnoose. finally from among such forw . attle to visit with her. brother. a �Irst With the help of his brother Art, Coach P. L. A.'s founder. Rev. Bjug Harstad. mldable electives as Elements of Law, j lteutenant In the air corps, home on urw Olson has put his men through an hour's stH! In his prime. a frequent academy ; Surveylnl. ,Navigation, History of Scandiw

'1·IO=i�r

o�e;

v:r=:� has an added thrill pracUce every evening, Mondays through

visitor and an Inspiration to thoughtful ! navla-:- Mineralogy. Mechanical Drawing, I Fridays. from 6:30 to 7:30 . . students as he occupied the pulpit in the Assaying. Old Norse. Greek, Geology. But I :r�f��ts.!��g I�

t a:�:� :; �a; w

r:; 1 . new Trinity church. then In the basement I maybe these experiences helped build real ,

stage. Such were the men and women i men and womt:n. department. letland & Palagruit who engendered the " fanatlcal loyalty" Less courage It took to fa� the costs of

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which Is sa�d to chara.cterize the product going to school. �'o hundred dollars Choir Elects Officers 928 Paclf1e Avenue of the early years of our present P. L. C. paid a full year's costs, tuition, board and The Choir of the West will make four 'Taoom&2, Washington A nay In tbe Dorm eve:-ythlng-unleu, of course, one got appearanCes during the Golden Jubilee � Such loya.lty was no doubt further I high toned and took music. That was celebration. The group will s1ng for the l L!i.============='ij strenathened b} the Intimate ties which I extra But things had to be cheap to openmg session on Wednesday, October developed under the rigors of the dorml� I make up for having to take orthoepy (S64 11 for the W M F on Friday, the ban· � RANWELL'S tory We of our day Up at 6 30 breakfast If some of our modern B A .s let that one ) Quet Saturday, and Bunde.y afternoon OR at 7 00, room inspection at 7 45 (and as I Well such in our allotted six hundred 1 The choir elected officers last week INE early as 8 30 on Sunday) a school day words was the school of our day Is it I Ruth Jensen Is preSident, Russ Murray, OUNTAIN 722 lasting untU 4 00 P m study hours from I any wonder that some of us ended up with I vl��presldent and Miriam Hopp, secrew EATURES Brdwy 7 00 until 10 00, little spending money psychology We should have started long tary�treasurer � � simple pasUmes. truly st1!f courses a I. ago But we wouldn t have missed it for I Ii} • 1 • I �:::�

n�;

a:: �';�C:::';:!�

d�h�

II���� Pee rle ss Grill I Victor's Marke t

DINNERS & STEAKS I ! century mark and see visiOns of the men • GROCERIES . MEATS • FOUNTAIN SERVICE I. and women who made "our" school-men Noted tor tbelr Efficiency COLD STORAGE LOCKERS

BLUE RUSTIC ' and women who were not afraid to do for Prompt Service, and Fine Food BROOKDALE OR. 8538 a; cause. a cause in whleh they believed, 'I 915 Commerce MA. 9702 0 Mounta.1n Highway I men and women who will bear emulation . �

Lundbe rg DrUg ! � ;:�;::e�:: ';�'�y�t�er 1\ c�;:·��7·ir . [ .. i

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11830 PACIPIC AVB.. I "' Strike ! Spare! Gutter ball . Crystal Palace Mkt, Second Floor ': _ ft

PHONX OR. 8518 It was "gutter ball" most of the time, iii but lun ,... the obJectlv. at the bowling • .

BROADWAY +----'------------+ I party Saturday nlaht, October 1, and tun II . • .

It wu. I McNess Products j ' MOT.OR �Q. 1 • WOBBlED! Are you troubled about what you al'e going to put "in that speeIaI ..... . package (due . Oct. 15. 1944:) tor that special someone aver· seas? Well then, why not .send' a 100% McGregor' wool Army Ctr' Navy sWeater or perhaps a 100% Botan.y wool muffle_r? TheY're both � for overseaa shipment and al80 mod· erate1y priced.. So why doIl't. you put a stop to your woes and �e a look at these · spec1a1 values now at-

'!be event ot the evening waa the strike . . I II _.I A to R i i", <>owled by our own ..,.. Blomquist. Three EXTRACTS. SPICES .nd S'S::..:. .... rdl:... ,,1:'': . rouSing cheer. went lIP In rocognltlon 01 HOUSEHOLD PRODUCTS ... BrOodway B& ,. her sk111, 1... OVERLA.ND OR. S'l2O The committee for the party, which ' .

was held under the au.sp1oes of the AasocI� III. • unlll the lut ·mlnute. APPBrontly ev.ry· , one had. decided. to forfeit such entertain· AND 0 �. ment, but a full truck load of human •

ated Student Body . .... 'ept III ,uspense . V. :

. SEARS R�EBUCK V

T.N.T. was f1nally signed, sealed. and ..... •

Broadway," 1 3th ..... Rust Bldg . dell�red to the bewUna alley in high I�;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;�;;;;;;;;;;;�-c.=v�;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;��;;;;;;;;;;;�;;;;;;� !.============� splrlts, much to the committee's reUef I i • and .veryODe's enjoyment. ;. . . . Lundquist-lilly Tacoma

.. -

Co�tulations

on Your ,/ . Golde n JUbilee

'Al!lPERs FLORIST : 255, so. , I I th

.. v

Plana for a skattna party to. be held January 12 ...... completed at a meeting ALL THE GOODNESS ot the A. W. S. h.ld Konelay noon; Oc.-r THE NAME I MPLI ES 2. Vloe'T>-.!ent Nor& KJeabu p_ded.

. . . . HOMOGENIZED

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PIPER' FUNERAL HOME 5<5Il 80. PUGft 800ND

GAr. 1H3I

Fortner CAA ftilntuclor Killed in Plan'e Crash · ,

Norval Norton, fonner aviation Instruc- I tor at Pacific Lutheran College, Mrs. Nor-

I ton. ina 1Ilelr· Cfijiiltt.er Mary Lee, g,"" were killed In an a.1rplane crash near I Buffalo, New York on July 27. i

Por the last tht'ff years, Mr. Norton I had been CivU Aeronautics Administration air service Inspector at Buffalo. New York. I The Norton home wu at WUliamsburg 1 just outside. Buffalo. The three had gon� to New York City where Mr. Norton at- I tended a seruor inspection conference. The fatal accident occurred on the way back during a. violent electric storm. Mrs. Norton was a ruece of Mrs. R. Franck. PLO faculty member. ! Roy McKinley Reported MiJl6ing in Action

Roy McKinley. ex '42. was recently re­POrted killed in action While on duty In the Frtmch campaign. Roy was very active In Uudent body affairs. He was one of PLO's star track men. and an actlv� member of the Lute Boasters while he attended our college.

I I

TQ Edit Saga .

E� Tonend. lJbera1 A.rt.s .tan-lor, wtU be edJtor of the 1945 Sap

I

. - . .. :CLlJB NOTES: .. :

THE VIKING CLUB provide a weekly fellowship period for all student,.,. Vice President !nia JohnlOn Ls .

, cha.1.rman. Eletson "'&$ choM:n vice-president; Fern I MlMion Society, oldest orpnizat1on on

: EricUon, �tary; and Marjorie carlson, ' the camp·us. elected officers at .. m�t1n.

I treasurer. DorLs Jurrerson, last year's pres- held In the chapel Wednesday, October t. ident, who presided until the new prest-

I

Those elected were Ted Reitz, presklent;

I dent took OHiCf. was dected �eant-at- Nellie RIse. vice' president; and Etta ClaW!­arms. Mr. Stuen. NOISe instructor, b the sen, secretary-treuurer. Telma. Metr.&'er i club ."adviser. and Vem Elstad were chosen L.S.A. rep-

1 CAMPUS DEVOTIONS resentatives. I Gerry Olson was elttted president ot j Mission Soclely dates back to the faU

I CiLmpus DevoUons at a meeting held in ot 1920. . .

the reception room Wed.nesda.y, October WAA . .: Other officers chosen were ·lnga John- 1 Fern Ertckson and. M8J"gie Carlson were ! son. vice president; Arleen Cordes, .sec- I ChoSen as tecretary lln� treasurer. res�­

' retarf-treasurer: and Jocelyn Lynne and t.Iv�ly, of the W. A. A. 'I\iesday evening, I N�llle Risa, L.S.A. �.representatlve. - I October 3. This completes the W. A, A.

The purpose of the organlzation ta to Cabinet. President Cecel1a Oardlln and ) Vice President Alice Kaaland were elt'Cted

. ------ . at a meeting held at the close of last GOLDEN JUBILEE . ,ear

(ConUnDf'd from Pap 1 ) Following the election. Mrs. Young, club

i Mlssionary Federation of the N. L. C. A.. f\dv�r, announced the major and minor

will give an address. After the noon sports .of the season, and discussed the

lunch, to be served in the Church Parolrs, , requirements for adml.ssJon into the W.

EVENING COURSES the session will reassemble at 1 :30 when l A. A. The me.p.ting close4 with a session LITTLE SYMPHONY (ConUnaed from. Pace 1) Dr. J. C. K. Preus wUl speak on "'Growth of volleyball. '

A.DDS NEW MEMBERS E�ucatfon 116� Special Projects. Op� and Power Through Parish Education." I LDR

'. .. I portunlty for students to pursue lines of Mrs E 0 Frltschel of Greeley Colorado I

The Incoming L O R officers will 1:e

17P

��t:u.::!�e Sy

:�ony

" now boasts special Interest under guidance of a fac- 2nd Vice President of th" Women's Mls- Installed at the first meeting to be held

serious work. �1;hnOUgh

��in��:7n � ulty member May be taken to meet the sionary FederatJon. A L- C will bring I Wednesday October 25, at the home of

still hoping to dd b ' requirements for the certification of teach- I an address, and Mrs Carl E Rydell of I Dr and Mrs EastvOld The objectives of

clarinet and a :trlnga

b ass

.. �la�:�e�. ��to ers and principals One to three credit ; Tacoma will extend greetings from the the L O R wUl be explained for tb!

empty �paces " ass 0 n e hours TIme to be arranged I W M S of the Augustana Synod The benefit of the new members Rumohr

The orches�ra will play at several J�bl� History 75 History of Latin America I session \\'111 elOISe with a lunch In the ��:a��:n m

:�:�:u:�;:nan promises

lee sessions this week, Including Thurs- Three credit hours. Prof. E. M. Akre. Church - Parlors at 4 .30. 1 --:::============" day rught, Saturday for the banquet. and Saturday forenoon. II Frlda.y evenlng's program wlll be under (jI:

• tel two apJ)ellI"ances on Sunday. History 15.5:' U. S. In World Affairs . . the auspices of the college faculty. or. 1 Mrs. Frisbee's

AI Kuhn, an old hand. at the orchestra Three credit hours. Prof. E. M. Akre. II J. P. Pflueger is the chairman. Bak business, Is doubling on the viola and Saturday forenoon. Saturday, October 14, has been set asld·:! ery violin. with vloltn a; his specialty At PhYSical EdgcatJon 31: Elementary '

l

as Foundation Day. and wtu be under the FOR FINE BAKERY PRODUCTS . has played in the Tacoma PhUhannonlc School Physical Education. Two Credit auspIces of the Associated Student Body. .

for two years. hours. Mrs. Rhoda Young. Tuesday eve- The Honorable Arthur B. LangUe, Oover- . 710 So. 38th St. Phone OA 7591

JIll:: ::::::::: ... :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!JI nl�� 10: Introduction to Fine Arts. prln- I �;a:!r�: t��

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f e�:�:�:io:,

l�e�: : :

ii ItA YMOND ELECTRIC CO. 11 ! clples of aesthetics. Appreciation Of , In Trinity Church. Governor Langlie's I[ BROOKDALE LUMBIR CO. .. H I beauty. Three credit hours. Dr. J. p· 1 subject Is "The Place of the Christian I ii 813 PACIFIC AVE. !l Pnueaer. Thursday ':!venlng. I College In our Democracy." 1 'Mountain Hla'bway Courses in Biology. SOClolog)', American i The final Jubllee day. Sunday, October

H BRdwy 1712 .. 'Hlstory and History of Washington �lay I 15. will ope':l with a communion service BROOKDALE, WASH.

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S E L D E N ' S Fint in Floor Coyerinp

OCCASIONAL FURNITURE LINOLEUM _ RUOS

SHADES - BEDDINO" DRAPERIES

Conducting the Tacoma Philharmonic I the communion address. A special youth ( TRICKS - JOKES · MACIC orchestra mow entering Its 11th series) I service Is scheduled for 9:30 at the Col- I

HALLOWEEN COSTUMES 1j which he founded, organized and has l Iege Church. Dr. J. C. K. Preus will de- Neal E. Thorsen conducted since, is Eugene Linden, stu- . liver the convention sermon at the 11:00 . MAIn <861 dent here In 1941. I service. 926'h BJ;:Oadway

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ii QUALITY KNITTING CO. gram. beglnnlng · .t 3,30. Spe ..... :: 834 coMlO!RCB ers will be Dr. Lee Paul Sleg, President 11 of the University of Washington, Seattle.

! Washington, whose topic wUl be "'"'-nte ,�--"----------':�:::===========4 I Publicly Owned College and University In our Democracy"; Dr.' R. Franklin Thompson, President of the College of .

RAU'S CHICKEN DINNER

INN JOHNSON & ANDERSON

GROCER IES , FLOUR - . HAY - GRAIN - ETC. On the Mountain Highway Parkla�d. Wash.

Puget Sound. Tacoma, Washlngtpn, whose speech wtll center on " The 'Prlvately Ownect College In our Democracy"; and . Dr. S. C. Eastvold, President of Pacific I!i

ORCIlAKD HILL , OIl S�W�� " �

Lutheran College, whose subject Is "Pacific ',; r .

. ' .1 Lutheran Colleae Loob to the PUture... . .

ANDERSO· N LUMBER COMPANY'· .

. The Jubilee cel,bratlon wtll be brought � STO . . . p. AT. to a. close with the regular Sunday evening

I 9802 PACIFIC AVENUE , broadcast over KVI from .,30 p. lit. to \' r. r] ' ] 'l rl . GRanite 73 1 1 " r:J �:;;;��;;;l

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""\ VISIT OU R NEW DEPARTMENT APP .... EL . at . 92� Broadway, Tacoma

• 9th and

' P.acific

Washington Sports Shop OWNED BY

.... Washington H8I:dwar'; Co. 918 PACIFIC AVENUE

SlCAn AT THE ROLLER BOWL

SOUTH TACOMA WAY

! I, I I

VOL. 22 October 26, 19+t

- - - - - -- _ . . ---==---::----: Linden to Direct I Shades of The Past

Opera at Parkland I DormJtory Aux1llary No. 2 or Paclilc Lutheran College Ls sponsoring another Lyrh: Theater production this fall.

Under the direction of Eugene Llnden. the Lyric Theater will present RoM1n1'& " The Barber of Seville" in the Parkland Schcol Auditorium. Friday, November 17 at 8: 15 p. m. A new English transla.tion by Eugene Linden, oonduclor ot the Ta­ccma Philharmonic, wUl be used. Paul Elmer, brother of Rudy Elmer, 'lSI, and lIutnmer '44. w1ll sins the title role lind the fem1n1ne lead wUl be t.a.t.en by Penka. LaMar. Others In the east include Marjory l\&ye'rs, Ralph M1Uer, Fletcher T'wleed and Cyrus Brewer. The orchestra I will comprise 16 players from the Tacoma i Philharmonic and the Seattle Symphony, 1

In Parkland, tickets will be on sale at the Partland Light and Water Co. and In II the Reg1.strar's OtrJce at PLC. TIckets are $1.50 for adults and 11.00 rOt students.

Lyceum Series Begins I' 'The Ctvtc Music Association of Tacoma wtll begin Its fourteenth season on Mon­day. October 30. At this time, Mantal Singher, ,ba.ritone. will make his North­west debut in the P\rst Baptist Church. !

Other arttsts to be presented during '

Ilemember "302"

Day

No. ,

reader of naUonal fame, He will ptO&tam In the Collete Chapel, evening, November III.

Oran. who is blind and partially has spent yean In study and baa

natton's iara:est cities. He hal power to hold his I.I.stenen durilll' an entire evening with his wonderful diction and flne voice.

"The Robe" is a difficult and involved story. 'Mle author tella the story or the robe which Chrlat wore before IDa &rrI'!St

and for which four soldlen; threw dice at the foot of the Ct'OISS. It Ls the story of one MarceIlWl, a young Roman Tttbune. who won the robe in a eambl1ll1' lame. TIle robe pCl5I5e58ed strange qualities which finally brought Marcellua to be one- of the (1nt Christian martyn in Rome.

Mr. Oran portra:ys the characten; of the stocy so that they wlll stand out in a never to be forgotten manner.

P'lfty cents is the price of admJ,ss1on, the pl"Ogl'8m Ls open to the publlc.

�.:, �rtii:' =I�=ai "'-c.: •• _-,.. "302" GHOST FRQUe . Quartet and the American Ballad Singe,.. IOm�n"iG SATUIlDAY

These concerts are on the student Ly- "Put on your oId black bonnet . . '- I ago, thla' nove1;y c�tcd a se�t1on CE'um series so be sure to sign up for your With the gold ribbons 00 .. it &.mODI taxi COll8CiowI pedeetrlam as it. ticket. Each student is entiUed to attend While we hitch two horses to the shay. wended Its way tllrough the streets of one concert. Through the streets of Parkland I We will bead toward Tacoma Tacoma.

For our Golden Jubilee." On PacUk Avenue the Jubtleers reacb-This tally-ho load of PLeers of 19« in ed a hill too steep for the tired horses . bustles and bow-ties of 1894 noLsed abroad i and found themselves climbing the b1ll

, their Golden Jubilee celebration on Oct. I on f::lot just as their grandparents had The Delta Rho Gammas are sponsoring , 11 . Though a common sight fifty years I to do a half century ago. the !1rst PLC Ice skating party of the ' ------- --....:.--------- - - ---

Fans to Cut Figures At Ic�Skating Party

:�:�=:y. November 10. Annie Lien i PK's, Not KP's, Keep PLC Running PLC students and frlends are Invited. , 22 of the 160 students at PLC are pas- I Ru&h Fosao, Literal Arts sophomore,

The party is to be held at the Lakewood i tors' children, more affectionately Imown I comes to us from Anacortes, Wash. Her Ice al"<na from 10:�15 to 12:15 P. M. as the P. K.'s. Here they are: I contrlbutlon to the "Court of Calamlt�es"

EYaD(eIiDe Ahrendt. freshman In Col- I is well-knOwn and remembered by the I lege of Education, comes from Rltzv1lle. I initiated freshmen. The Rev. O. Fossa is NO HORSE-NO HA Y : Wash. Since the arrival of her oboe, she I pastor ot Anacoms Lutheran Church. SO HIKE TO SP.4N.4W.4 Y II has played In the "LitUe Symphony." The Galha...,. st. ..... G ..... ElaIne

and do her neighbOrs know It! Her father. I and Gertnlde {Barge> Bumohr, come from The Preshman Hayride last Friday eve- i the Rev. P. J. Ahrendt, is pastor of Em- Astorta. Oregon. Orace Ela1ne Is a fresh­

Ding turned out to be a b1te to Spanaway : manueJ Lutheran Church, Ritzville. man In College Of Education, whlle Ru· Lake. Since .horse' and wagon were not II Helen BIomeUe and her sister Sylria mohr is a freshman in LIberal Arts. PianOE obtainable, the f11ty freshmen and their are local product8, OOming from Tacoma. I and bass viola run in the family; 50. does friends � Sh.ant·s horses to LitUe Helen, a junJor in Liberal Arts, is well- good scholarsh1p, The girls were valed1c­Spanaway for the always weJcome com- i1 ltnoWD in the ma1n office as Golden torian and .salutatorian respectively, of the bination of hot dogs, potato salad, and JubUee secretary. Sylvia, a freshlDan in I graduating high. school class in Astoria singing 'round the fire. Mlsa Blomquist ' Liberal Arf-', s1n18 In the choir and sex- lut spring. Rumobr is vice-president of and Mrs. Younl accompanied the hikers 1 tet�. Both girls are members of ORO. the L.DR. The Rev. Theodore slulhaugen as chsperons. The Rev. O. K. Blomel1e is in Anchorage, l is

.pastor of the First Norwegla�utheran

Al&slta, organlz1ng a congregation. Church in Astoria. < J'eandte BunlaIf, junior in COllege of , Daphne Hellman, freshman In\ Liberal

/J l'I�iLfn t!Its:1£1"" Education, is a semi-local product, com- i Arts from Portland, Or�on/-�e her (;'-""""11 c-V"""q Ing from Puyallup. Jeanelte � In the , debul to the A.8.B. as co-author 61 "Little Satuda;,-. Oet.ebft' !8--"302 Day"; L8A choir an� sext.ette and Ls prom.hient in I Walt Riding Hood." , She 13 the fire-

Halloween Party at Lutherland. the OROB. She has a mania for moving I warden for the D.PKs. Ber father, the . furniture and did the decOrating for the I Rev. Walter H, Hellman, 1& pastor of s�;,-. October 29-1:30 p. m. Reforma.- l tnstaUatiOD banquet." The Rev. O. K. Penninsula 'Peace Lutheran Church in uOU\ festival at central Lutheran Burzlaff Ls a m.fn1ste:r at St. John's Luth- PorUand. Church. Tacoma. PLC Choir w1ll sing. eran Church. CbehaUs. Waah- Another PK lass from Tacoma 1& Buth

Moada;,-, November S. to Fridar. NOrtID- Lee F� a LIberal Arts treahman, J'e�n. sophomore In the COlkge of her l�Mid�semester exam..inatioDs. I from Tacoma, 1lIi deflnttely versatUe. He EducaUon. She Ia treasurer of the LDR, nw."n.lar• N..-emher' I-Walter Gran to plays the Prench ho� � the orchestra slngs in the choir. and plays the Ivory dramat&.e ·Douglas's best seller. Tbe and tbe left end spot on the football keys on numerous oocastoos. The choir IIAbe. team. The Rev, Ward. P. ·Pol5Om 111- the chose her for their prea1dent th1a aemes­

Fridar. N�ber It-ORO Ice-atating mJ..ni5ter of Calvary Presbyterlan Church, t.er. The Rev. O. L, Jensen Ls the mIn1IIter party, 10:15 to 12:15, Lakewood. Arena. Tacoma. (CentU.ed on Pace S)

, � <. � ....... � •• -.------------

Qather round, all you spooks. wltchea, and jack-o-laittems. fer "302 Day" is your, chance to be chief acton on the "Luther\and Btaae." The curtain will be rung up Saturday afternoon, October 28th-the 302nd day of the year.

The LBA Council lnvltes you to play your role agatnst the back drop of treea and the floor of grass at the favorite camp spot on Late Klllamey. P'Un and frolic In the Halloween manner are await­Ing all.

In charge of the ghost party are: EunJce Torvend, entertainment; Dorothy Rasmussen, refreshments; Telma Metz­ger, publ1c1ty ; and Vernon Elstad, trans­portation.

Ens. Art Larson Visits Old Stamping �round

Art Larson, ex '43; was a campW5 visitor and chapel speaker here Tuesday, Oct. 24. He Is an ensign in the U. 8. Navy and is bome on furlough,

Art was an active PLClte. He was prominent in athletics, a member of the Mooring Mast staft and comm1ss1oner of advertisement on the Student Body Coun-cil.

.

His father, Rev. E. A. Larson 1& a mem­ber of the faculty. Also represenUng the family at PLC was his sister, Dorothy, and at pre�nt, hJs brothers Robert and Roy are upholding the family name.

FROSH TO MAKE MUSIC All Preshmen with mualca1 experience are urged to join the Preshman band, organizoed to provide entertainment at the Fr�hman Mixer to be held late in Novem�er. Qerhardt Rosin, orpnJzer of the band, made thla appeal at a Preah· man Class meeting held T\leed&y nOon, October 11, in the Chapel. Band po8lUona are stili open.

, .� .. . . ,.ti''':lJIlI:-- .. --� ... � ... � ,.; I

October 28, If«

...----�mly� .ooring aut \ Publ.LIbed e'ftr'J two weeb d.� the .cbooI rear by

atudenta 0( P&cltle Lutben.D 00Uece. IWith the __ Clltcs iH Servicc AllIIIINi "

Office: Room 130 Telephone: OR&n1te .11 Mr. and Mrs. WUllam Bomba4ler, (Mar-_ 8u.blcdpUoo prio&---t1.DO per y� guerite Demers, 'S8�, ot Olympia. »e(:ame . UPPl'!�IMS studentll were pteuantly SlIr--, tile J)iirenl.!- of a ' 9inl Ibt WMne!Jl1.,. prlsed to sef! Ed Berp.acd. ex '44, drop in The boy wtll be named WilHam Arthur,

, for a short visit Monday evening. Ed has Jqa.n Nyqulst of Baker, Oregon, became been tn the Infantry since August 1 1 and the bride of Don Mattes, '40, on· Auaust

Bntered as second elMs matter. October 2, 1026, .. t the P'08t Ofnee at Pvklt.nd.. Washington. under the Act of Ma.rch S, 1871. EDITORIAL STAFF has been stationed at Camp Roberts. Last 1 27. 'Che Mattes' !U"e mak.lng their home

ANITA STU EN, ALICE BRUDIE I week lu! I"l'ceh'f!d a transfer to the medl- Is Walla Walla, Wash., where Oon 18 Theodore Reitz I cal corps and Is now ,stationed at Ft. teaching. OO-EDITOIlS

A.Mociat.e Editor Advt.er Mrs Ruth Franck LewL<;. He expects to slay there for at

RefXlrters: Virginia Isvtck. Dl\phne Hellman, Helen Anderson, Ardys Bredvold. Telma , least 6 weeks. Address : Ed Bergsagel.

MeUiger, Beryl Bergan. A.n1ta Roth. Ruth Johnson, Loul.se Tollfeldt. ::�716, Co. C. 150 M . T_ B .. Fort Lewis, Theodore (Ted) U. EvJent.h, '32, 1.8 con­

valescing from illness at his home, 654 Cheney St., Ban Francisco, California, He

BUSINESS MANA.GER

Aa1stant Managec Blislnes& Secretary Advertl61ng Manager Ctrculation .

BUSINESS STAFF DOROTHY NIEMAN

Ma.rtan Butler lnga Jobnson

Cortnne Erickson

Jerry Thorpe, ex '''4, has been stationed has two children, Chr18t1ne, 3, and 11m­In Bremerton for st'veral weeks awaltlng othy. 6 months assignment. He expects to receive orders Charlotte Ooplerud, '39, wa.s married In SOOIl June and now Is Mr8. Haakon Larsen.

The address of Lloyd N,hu, ex '43, who She was married In her home town of entered medleal !lCh�1 some time ago L.. SUverton and Is now teaching school In L. M. Nyhus, AS V-ll. 342 Thomas St., Tacoma while her husband Is In the Cecelia Gardlln Tuscaloosa, Alabama. �lle Birltestol I Paul Blled, '37, visited the campus whlle

Grace Btrkestol on furlough last week. He taught at the Solicitor.; : Margte Carlson. Grace Gulhaugen, Rumohr Gulhaugen. Jocelyn Lynne. Arletta School before entering t.he service

Ruth BJerkan. a.nd Naomi Trussell. I where he Is now serving as chaplnln·6

Servtcemen'6 C1rculaUon Exchange

service

Mr_ and Mrs. JOhn Ooplerud. '30, re­cently became the proud parent.s or a !\eCond daughter The family Uvea at 5389 Village Oreen. Baldwin Hills - Village, l..o6 Angeles 16, Callrornla. Mr. Ooplerud Is a former editor of the M. M.

I assistant. Address : Cpl. Paul O. Blled, O. J. Stuen 39179004. Service Co. 264 Int.. Camp Ruck­er, Alabama, Paul plans to return to

THIS AND THAT te:���� a�, 7��t, h:

x ��: In a letter John V. Valenta. '39, Is principal at the from France dated Sept. 21. thanks th� :::�:::::, ::�I. near BoLhell, at

I M. M. ror the Issues he has received dur-Some of the Mooring Mast's most avid

readers are the Lutes In the servlC4", who depend on the school paper to keep up to date with the alma mater and to learn where their old campus friends are. and what they are dolnK_ Last l--rear more copies of the Mooring Mast went to servicemen than to the current student body

Since our entr'lIlce into the War. we have been sending t.he M. M, frf'(' of charge to our boys In service. or to as many of them a.s we could keep track of If we are to continue this much apprPCl­at.ed work. we need your help. Money for postag� must come entirely from dona­tions. as Lhe� is no special fund provided for it. While the college faculty, alumni.

There is an old bogey who C'Omes around to ('very school once in Q while and tries to spoil our fun. That bogey will visit PLC In Just abOut two weeks-November 6 to 10. to be exact. Who Is he? You've guessed It-mid-semester exams

and the servicemen themselves have made Ing the past year and a half. He says Newly appointed superv180r of athletics generous contributions. donations from I he wants t.o keep up with the progress I of the Tacoma park syste

. m 18 ArthUr E.

the student body have lagged. We are ! of his Alma Mater, to which he hopes to Spencer. '33, 523 South 0 St. He wfll act

calling your attention to It now, for we I return and comments "keep 'em coming.·' as full Ume assistant to Thoma.s W. Lantz.

know this Is not willful neglect. Ed souncis a timely warning to us from SUperintendent of Lhe park board . . Mr.

I his position In a. country that has sufferEd Spencer has been teachinlJ In the Clov!!r

When YOIl call for your Mooring Mast under the Nazi heel: "France is tooay a Park system I warning to Americans to guard their Thursday noons. you wtll find a box on I Uberties well and to take nothlng. not Mr. and Mrs. Eric Krause of Tacoma the counter marked: Student contrlbU- 1 even the hamburger at Andy's or the are the parents of it baby daughter born tions tor servicemen's copies. How about dally chapel service, for granted." He Bept.ember 26. They named the baby

.An­

bringing a coln or bUJ with you the next descrtbes how France became the victim I nette Marie, Mrs. Krause Is the former of takl thl r l.ed r I I Gertrude Bunner, '36.

time you �t your paper and placing It In ng Ilgs or gran . Re err ng

the bOx? We know you are short of Pin ! to the hate and evil obvloull everywhere - § .... I he adds : "Pacific Lutheran College Is a I �/� rl /l II money ann t.hAt you have been a.sk.ed for I symbol of culture and friendship, and or I.:/nOpe, :;t,1I0it:S a number of c.)UUays recently. but the a way of life the Old World seelTl.S to be "Uod hath chosen those who are hum-���::I:�.:�.';' ,:r :�L't:'��t�t' ::U.,::;':;O�'t�

d i ��:C'�;�;n�:":: �.

o�s

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rc�:r:

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�idt" Oil! I An a news commentary '·The Campus tana Synod and the World" 111 the Mooring Mast while he was here, Address ; Pfc_ Edward ; '·The salvation of God Is sufficient unto c. Ekstedt. Co. B .. 1 19th Med. Bm .. APO I forgiveness ; It Is sufficient unto Ute; It

and then \-OU II be able to go eaS\' on mid- ' 44. c/o Po.<:tmastcr, New York, N. Y. I is sufficient' unto 0. way of I1fe. God . . Vern�r Bitter, '37, Is continuing his I opens the way when It is in Christ."-Rev night oil when Mr Bogey arrives As ' medical training. Address: Verner W. Carl E, Rydell, Pastor, First Lutheran any uppcrcla

. ssman will

.testifY• an ounce Bitt'ftf· USNR. Ph. M, l/ C, MWSS-9, 9th

. I Church, Augustana Synod, Tacoma. I MAW FMF, USMCAS, Cherry Point. N, C of consclentiOu.� review 15 worth a pound Eldon Kyllo, ex ·43, who is In the Army w���:e:�o

ar:o

n:ot

tr�!w

wise ��le I� the

of la.st -second cramming. Also, a good Air Corps, Is now at Lincoln, Nebraska I S C Eastvold.

God. Pres dent

Sneaking up quietly when ,we least think night·s slf'('p will give you a much better after a short furlough to his home at

about him, that·s Mr. Bogey's worst char- start than an all-night session with hls- ��::� :��:::�n�e

::. was formerly

as�� ;; �:e

�� ��'s

l�::.�'�:e:.re

E.al

� actert.stic_ He·s also an old hand at giving , tery or compo If you're careful not to Note : Anyone who has or receives In- Larson. people examination jitters. Dark-circled trail off on other subjeets. youll be sur- formation about the boys In the service �::::::::::::::::=::::::::=====;; eyes and worrted t'xpresslons usually go prised at what you can I�arn by cooper- , from PLC please turn It In to the Assocl- i

ANDERSON GROCERY with his v1s1tations. atlv� studying. ate Editor Ted Reitz of the MM. i , I Parkland, W&ah.. GR. 85eO But Old Mr. Bogey isn't really such a Above all, don't worry about Mr. Bogey's ; Sing a song of br111iance-somethtng I

SCHOOL SUPPLIES ADd. bad chap, U you know how to handl� him. anticipated visit. If he knows you are , "ain't"

got.'

HOME BEMEDIES Never let him catch you unawares. but

dreading his stay, he wUl gtve you a i Four and twenty brain cells-Isn't that a te prepared for his calls. How do you do

miserable time. Just treat him coolly with I lot? .

careful preparation and a confident attl- : For when the tests are given, I ::::It with that? Well. you can begin now by using tUde;, and you will nnd he's as harmless I hands on chin. study-hour Ugbts falt.hfully every night as a Halloween ghost. Now isn't that a pretty fix to see a Fresh-

I man In? .. -- - . - --- - ---- - - j ne teacher's at the blackboard, a-wrttin'

COLLEGE HAIRCUTS PARKLAND BAltBER

C. R, MARSH Regardless of your marksmanship in

I any time from 8 00 a m to 10'00 P m I B ,

fUriOUSly, II .� I I ' u my paper es "<a ore me as blank 8.5 Ii

pelliDg pebbles, have you ever t.hought. We dldn t dare sit on the beds, con- blank can be _ �j ,----------__ ......iIII

about living in a glass house') Not tbe I fessed one dormite "and we even walked. I My classmates all around me are scrtb- I'-------------aroaDd the rugs to avoid treading lint on bllng at great rate

frosted variety, but the kind where you'd I them l H But something i s the matter-my brain BERCLAND HARDWARE CO.

always be in view. Well, if you're interest- But things began to look more com-won't percolate ! tcMa PAOIPIO

ed you mighf \just page the dorm girls-- fortable, come Monday of th1.s week Bed- "You need not open your mouth quite OR. I'fIO especi..a.lly those occupying the newly te- spreads were mussed. where chattertng so wide," said the dentist to "Mim" Hopp I :�============� furb1s.hed rooms on the second floor. Now

coeds dropped themselves tor a gabfest.; "I'm going to stand outside to do th1s that festivities are over, they might take rugs displayed a chance cookie crumb Job." time off !rom fleclting lnvis1ble dust here and there; desk tops d.1dn't groan motes to talk to you. f under quite such a volwninous load of 1r.1:� =t

��er�o

: ::�s f;�n

: :a':�!::; Being Exhibit A 15 really a strenuous student erudiUon. Normalcy, just the forget-the one who stU! owes him some business----especially when guests arrive good old normalcy. agaln. money.

. '-

WIutD ,.. ...... _ -.-.. C. FRIO CHllmNSIN BT&TIONU U!ooeDburp)

813 Pac1fIc Ave. --

" I !

Kapowsin � Bows To PLC G'rid.Men

PAOE 'nIRD

_ - And Still More PK's I CWB NOrES

I of Messiah Lutheran Church. Tacoma. minLst.er or the Phinney Ridge Lutheran maklng plans for the Regional Can· l OonUn1M'!d from pap 1) I l holr. The Rev. R A. Ofstedal I.a the I The Campus L8A Council L!I flIrudy

Chalklng up their second gridiron \'!c- ' Delcre KeUer, rreshman In Uberal Arl.'>. L Church, Sea.tUe. rerence to bf! held here Dec. 2 and 3. tory this � out of three -em::ounters. I Clune t.o PLC rrom ntrneld. 'WMh. She I Dorothy ItaImtlMftl, SO-pHo-tfiore lh Lib- TIl; Council is made up of t.Wb ttfJr� the war t.ime Lutes defeated Kapowsin sings In t.he cholr and Is an acrompl�hed eral Arts, better known as "RassY," comes sentattve8 from each of the religtoW! 01'­High School team 13 to 7 last. Thursday :. k.nltter. The Rev. Martin C. H. Kp.Uer Is recently from Seattle but originally from ganlzaUom of the CamplU. The p�nt aflemoon. The next tilt will be a rt"tum I the pastor of :lilon Lutheran Church. Falr- Madagascar. She is the advertlslng man- membership lncludes Dorothy Rumussen game with the Lincoln reservists this Frl- field agel' for the A..o;,soclated Students, � on and Joan Satern. LOR; Telma Meuger day aftemoon. The brothers Robert and Roy Larson the LSA oouncU and sings In the choir

I and Vem Elstad Mlsslon Society , Neme Using a Baker-You-Drlve truck, the are the sons of the Rev Arthur Larson The Rev C P Rasmussen Is working Rlsa and J�lyn Lynne Campus Devo­football men and their school supporten; who teaches Swedish at PLC Both boys with the �atlonal Lutheran Council In Uons and Eunice Torvend and Oilrry left last Thursday at. noon for the sched- are freshmen In the Liberal Arts course the Seattle area Olson. Fireside Isabel Harstad � member uled game at 2:00 P. M. The end of thE' llH"Y are day·students and are following T� Rells., sophomore III Liberal Arts. 1 ex offlelo and Miss Nielsen Is the ad,,\8er first Quarter found the ball on the Ka- in the foot.<;teps of Brother Arthur and from American Falls Idaho has the dls- The orftcers were elected at the Oct powsin 8 yard line. It was pushed. over Brother-In-law MarY Harshman by being tinction of being the only male member I 19 meeting. as follows: Joan Satem. presl­the goal line for the first touchdown on the football eleven. Bob was recently of his cli\SS. of which he Is presldent._ He dent: NelUe RJ..sa.. vice- president; Telma lafter t.wo trlesl with Gerhard Rosin car- released from the Navy. The Rev. Arthur I also heads the Mission Society. and Is Metzger. secretary-t.N!uurer. rylng t.he bali. TIle try for the po�nt was Larson is pastor at Bethel Lutheran 'l associate editor of the Mooring Mast no good Church. Tacoma.. The Rev O. W_ Reitz is the minister of CAMPUS DEVOTIONS Lee Folsom kicked off for PLC to stArt Lydia LentL freshman In Liberal Arts. St. John's LutJieran Church, American Mrs, Anna Enge was chosen adviser of the secotld half. PLC's second touchdo ..... n recently of American Falls. Idaho. but I P'aUs Campus Devotions at a noon meeUng ..... as made In the third Quarter with Earl now from Taooma. is an addition to the A.l'n� Roleder-one half of the Ag and held Thursday. October 19. Devotions Nordeng carrying the ball Into the end vocal talent of PLC. Ice·llkating and Mim team-hails from Lad\, CalUornla. were le'd by Telma Metzger. Gerry Olson zone on a quarterback sneak. Nordcng hiking are among her hobbles. The Rev· 1 but was born In Russia. This sophomore sang was ILSSlgned the same job for the next Samuel Lentz Is minister of Peace Luth- In the College of Education sings In the play In order to get the point. which he cran Church, Tacoma. cholr and In the girls' trio. and works In MISSION SOCIETY completed successfully_ Coming back for Er-Unl NonlelLl, freshman In Liberal the library. Her father. the Rev. E. J '"Here am 1; send me" was the theme reVEnge a Kapowsin man. Michelson. re- Arts. from Vashon Island. is Freshman Roleder. Is pastor of Emmanuel Lutheran of the dlM:usslon led by Dr. Pflueger. at celved the ball on the kickoff on their class representative. He Is alao on the Church. Ladl the last. meeting of t.he MlSSlon Soct:et.y 20 yard Hnt" and went all the way down PLC eleven. This is his second semester I Marlon SoUman, Junior In the College Wednesday evening. october 18 Joan the field for a touchdown with none of here. The Rev. H. Nordeng is pasll>r of

of Educatlon. comes from Seattle. In Satem led In scripture reading and prayer our men able to successfully tackle him Bethel Evangelical Free Church, Vashon

addition to being the A WS president, she � ---'i) Jack Harris placed a drop-kick over thE' Island. sings In the choir and plays t.he violin \)I.

to PLC's 13 at the end. omore. from Seattle. is secretary of the father. the Rev. John H. Soltman. pastor Lineup for the Kapowsin game was ' ���de��t!:;·.�

b�;'n��d:::n:I�: ��rk t�: of the North Broadway Methodist Church.

J .. t1alld & Palagrllli 928 Pacific Avenue

post and so Kapowsin had a score of 1 Dorothra Ofst.edal, a Liberal Arts SOPh. ! In the string quartette_ Last yellr her l Left End Folsom

Seattle, attended PLC as a special student Tacoma 2, Washington ��� �r::� ����}; � From way down San Dlego way comes l ·::.:============,

i!J " " .. IN Ruth Towe, a sophomore In the COllege Center Logsdon A"lIte ,l.vOSSICS ACTION of Education. She is the one who takes jji !il Right Tackle ;!:;� Ye aide volleye balle is stm taking the bookstore. At other Urnes she Is heard �::� Ehld

Nordeng proverbial beating. The gals really man- playing the piano for orchest.ra and sing- INE Realskl age to "keep It flyingl" ' Ing In the choir. The Rev. A. J. Towe is OUNTAIN 122

Right Guard B Larson the money from hard up students in the l· �

oR

RANWEll'S

�!��tH��lf

Brammer Meanwhile we folloW a number of our pastor of Our Savlour's Lutheran Church EATURES Brdwy lassies to the fresh all' frolics. Ruth In San Diego. � Fullback Plhl Pflueger and Loul.se Touteldt have quite

I Substitution Rosin (because of injury) a racket when It comes to tennis They ->- ---I 0-Games Won � the courts vocaUzlng on There s a Hole , for Halloween • GROCERIES . MEATS • Games Lost In the Old Oaken Racket " I COLD STORAGB LOCKEJ1.8

Garnes Played ' l osn be hea'" on thel, way to and f<om I MASKS - COSru MES - TRICKS I Victor's Market

�:�: �:;';'��o" : w��,,;":�,,;,�e

o;e:�,�� ���:���;� you 1 Neal E. Thorsen I BROOKDALE GR. .... l:��:::�=;�:�:le ..-

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�. DRAPERIES / J=mu::n::um:::=:n:::::::;::u:::--==a::;::I"uum::t:JIIIl ______________ --.:.---------..:.1

2U1I

. - ':' -- _ . .., PAGE POUR PACIPIC LUTHERAN COLLEUE October :;s; 1 ....

S . D-i.. t I Bay Bl"OOklyn, N Y I PP'C HARRY A ERICKSON, 00 A 379th 1 28'773'1. APO 15218. c/o PoIJt,maater, New ervtce � ec ory CPL RAYMOND R. KAPUS 19113353 I Inf , APO 95, clo Poitmaat.er, New York I York. N Y ' Mem.bers of bot� the faculLy and stU- I 514th f' A Bn , Fort Bna', N C I City, N Y ENSIGN PAUL &DWARD PPLUDlER,

dent body haw requested the Mooring CPL. PRED M. KROEGER. 3Sn02448, LT WlLLYB POLBOM, Hq 1 1th Air USNR, U S S LCl(L) 702, c/O P'leet Mast to publ1&h the ad<lres&es of PLC Coffeyville RTU- (PR) CAAF', Coffey- P'orce, APe 942, c/o PoIt.m..uter Seattle, Poet Office, Ban P"ranclsco, call! �C:.e.me.n .tQ t.b&t.. tbc.¥ tn.a3 send Chdst-j VlII� :om WMb:. N

T PAUL POLILLO, 181� Co H, mas mall to them A considerable number I CPL ROBERT C POR.NEs8. 3930ii.i5 fih -yji)':-AJI('j , c 0 Poei"niiiier, 1reW of serv1cemen are not receiving their T/80T HARRY LANG B« D-l, Bu I 4SNJth. Bomb 8q <Ill) A. A P APO ca: York, N Y copies of the Mooring Mast bt.'cause their 367, LAAP �laredo, Tex

c/o Po6tmuter, New York, N Y T/" JAl4lC8 M SLOVER, 18148848. 2nd current addresses have not been repor1.ed P'RED S MILLER, P O Box 286, A.AP ENSIGN DONALD E. P'REET, DB Bomb- Bn Hq Co. 28Itb Int . APO 700, c/o to us We would Uke to aU the coopera- Convalescent Center f'ort George 10& la, c/o Pleet Post Office, San Pran- I PostmMter, San P'ranclIcO, caw

tlon of everyone in ftnding the COl'TeCt Wright, Wash. I cisco, Calll. I lruGENE ADDISON SNYDER, PllM'. 2/c, addresses for any PLC servicemen not LT. R. C. MULI..oEN, A. C., Sec. B, 3505 PFC. RJCHARD P.RIES'rn: 39204701, 89th I!: Co. 1st KeeUeal Bn., l't Marine ot-l.Lsted below. Turn In the addresses either A.B.U .. Scott P'lekl, Ill. Airdrome Squadron, APO 883, c/o Post- vision, c/o Fleet Post.matUor, Ban Fran-to Annabelle Blrke1tol, In charge of serv- AlB LLOYD NEHUS, V-12. 342 ThOlhM I master, New York, N. Y. c1IcO, Cal1t. . Icemen '. exchange, or to Ted Reitz, asso- St., Tu8caloosa, Ala. T/80T. JOHN GARDLlN, 38173857, Co. I PVT. HARRY 80L008. 18113838, Co. G, clate editor. Your 8.!ISistanCt' in th.b matter PPC. R. A. NEWTON, 39214009, Co. B, C, 17'1 Eng1neers, O. S. ut Bn., APO I 312 Inf. APO ,"" c/o Poetma.ster, Ban will be gt"eaUy appreciated. SOOth S.T.R. Bu. 3782, Camp Crowder, 942. clo Poetm..ut.er, Seattle, WashinC- Pranetsc:o, cant. . .

Following 18 the l.Lst of up-to-date ad- !.fusourt. ton. . I LE8'I'ER W. 8TORA.A8LI, 81,/3, MTB dresses on our files : I HERBERT NIENSTEDT. �/c, Class 8- STAN GILJE. 8S W. L Thomp8Ol1, c/o , COm Rova e:ootl24, c/o Fleet Poet Office, ENSIGN GUSTAF ANDERSON, A-V (N) 45, Hospital Corps School, Jl"arrqut. Fleet P\)etmuter, San I"tanciaco, Call1. 1 7th Pleet, san rr.:n.c1aco, Calif.

USNR. Box 27 Building 701. U.S.N.A.S.. Ida. I PVT. MARTIN R: GULHAUGEN, 3032M50 LT. O. JOHN BTUEN. UB.S. nCODderop., Jacksonvtlle, Florida. ENSIGN HAROLD NORDENG, USNR, A. Btry B, UHth FA Bn., APO 7&8, clo c/o Pleet Poet Oftke, San Ptancaco.

KARL ALVIN BACHNER, 82/c, Box 18 : T.B. Coronado, K-9, San otego, Callf. Postmaster, New Yon: ctty, N. Y. Callf. Platoon 355, U. 5. Naval Air Statton, MARTIN NORTH, Bldg. 75, Apt. C, Fa:r� ROBERT HADLAND, Y8/2 536-806, L. S. GEORGE THORLIEP'80N, C. Bp. (AI, Jacksonvtlle. Flor-Ida. ragut Villaae. Farragut, Ida. T. 788, c/o Fleet Post OffICe. New York, Navy 3305 Welfare & Rec., c/o Fleet

PVT. ARTHUR o. BAGAABON, 3704 A. j ENSIGN EARL PLA'IT. 3617 6th Ave., N. Y. P. O., San PrancJeco, Calli.

AP. Base Unit, 8ecUon N. Box 417, I Tacoma. Wash. LT. (J.g.) T. O. HAGENESS, 33M81. Ttain- ENSIGN BURTON THORPE, NBS. LB. Keesler Fteld, M1saiss1ppi. EDWIN SANDVIG. HA.l/c. U. 8. Naval lng Aids Section, Navy 128, Fleet· Poet I M. la, c/o Pleet P. O., New Yort- City.

PVT. EDWARD BEROBAGEL, 39479715. 'I Hospital Staff. Great Lake1, ru. orrlce, San JI'ranclaco, calU. N. Y. Co. C, l50th MTB, Fort Lewis, Wash. CPL ROBERT R.. SNYDER, 19112721, co. C. SP. MARVEL KEITH HARSHMAN, LT. E. A. VALENTINE, 0�581305, 51th

BERTn. BILLDT, AlS. U.s.N.&., Mld- I E, 302nd Inf. APO 94. Camp McCain. WeUaz-e Dept. NAB., Navy 230, c/o stn. ·Comp. 8qd., APe) 637, c/o Post-sbJpmen's School. Rm. 414. Tower Hall, 'I Miss. Pl!Iet Poet Office, San Francisco, C&lll. master, New York, N. Y. 820 Tower Court, Chicago 11, Dllnols. JAMES STEELE, 148 Med. Bn., 35th Reg- I ENSIGN �NG R. HARSHMAN, MARVIN SIGURD TOMMERVlK C. Sp ..

P��

C�

W��=;" ��I:::: := �;t,

=�� ��, A/S, Regt. i �.�'� B�:=, ��:�' c/o Fleet j Camp Bennion, F'amLirUt, Ida.

Unit, Stockton Field. cal1l. 42 Bldg. N Apt. I-G. U. S. Naval Train- : MAJOR PHILIP E. HAUGE, Hq. 306th CPL. PAUL G. BLlED, 39179004, Serv1ce ing School (W.R.) . Bronx. New York 63. 1 Service Gp., APO 650, clo Postmaster.

Co., 264th Int., Camp Rucker. Ai&.. N. Y. I New York, N. Y. Mrs. Frisbee's

Bakery CADE:!' ROLPH A. BOLSTAD, 2921 Wal- MARCUS STUEN. USNR. 604 No. 14th I RUSSELL H. HEGLUND, C.C.M., Sub-ton Avenue, Los Angelea 7, CaUf. St., Milwaukee 3, W1sc:. I marine Base, Navy 128; E & R Dept. POll FINE BAJ[E&Y PRODUCTS PVT. VALE BURGER, 39216827. 2527th LT. HARVEY M. TOLLFELDT, 0-2059426, I Shop No. 7, clo Fleet Post Office, San 710 So. 38tJl 81., Phone GA 7591

Base Unit. Sect. C, South Plain Army Squadron T-l, 461�L A.AF.B .. Lemoore P'ranc1sco, Calll. �"':.: ============::;!l Air Field, Lubbock. Texas. Field. Lemoore, CaUf. TEe .!4 KENNETH I. HELLING, 392032'11, • • LT. R. H. CLARK, 2840 E. Mabel Ave .. N. K. JENSEN. D-203, A/S USNR, Lyman 103 Evac. H06J)ltal (SM) ' APO 403, c/o Tucson, Ariz. Hall, V-12 Unit, Walla WaJla. Wash. Postmaster, New York City, N. Y. CADET JOHN P. CORLISS, 702 Alder CAPT. GERHARD BELOUM. 0-461t50. ENSIGN H. L. HOFF, U.S.N.R., U.B.B.

Avenue, Sumner, Wa.sll1ngton. Hq. 35 Di1'. Artry., APO 35, New York. Eldorado (AGe-11), c/o Fleet Post Of-ENSIGN O. F. DAHL, U.SN.R., Room 209, N. Y . flee, New York City, N . Y.

BROOKDALE LUMIER CO.

BROOKDALB, WASH. Venetian Hotel, Naval Training Center, LT. GOOROE R. BROZ. 0-758304, 306th LT. (j.gJ OORDON S. HUSBY, UBB. M1a.rn1, Pl&. I Bomb. Group (H) , .23rd Bomb. Squad Sterett, clo Po5tm.aster, San FtaOCI.«;co, I:============:: PVT. JOHN IX>BLER. 39209920, Hq. Co. 4H), APe) 667, clo Postmuter, New Calll. I @. � 89th 81gnal Plat., APO 89, clo Post- York City, N. Y. CPL. RUDOLPH JOHNSON, 18H5759, Tr. master, Camp Butner, N. C. EARL FORREST BRYANT. A . .J.RJd., B. 15th Ren. Sq., APO 403, clo Poet-SOT. WALDO ELE:FSON, 19145760, Bo. Bombing SquadroD 116, c/o Fleet Post I master, New York, N. Y. RAU'S 16 Meel. Bee. SCSU 1136, CUshing Gen- Ortlce, San Francisco, Callf. ENSIGN RICHARD LANGTON, U.B.B. eral Hospital, Framingham, Mass. PVT. ELMORE S. BURINGRUD, 39211933, L.C.1.(L) 632 •. c/o Fleet Pofit Office, Ban CHICKEN DINNER

JERROL R. SHOE, 82/c, U.BN.R., Box 18. 3606 Ord. H.A.M. Co., APe) 957, c/o Francl5co, CalU. U. S. Naval Station, JacksonvUle, Pla. Po5tmaater, San Pranclsco. CaUf. ENSION GERALD LIDER, UB.S. LS.T. D. B. Gn.BERTSON, A/S, Co. 7'11 -44, RAYMOND A. DEKI'Z, QM2/c, usa Bar- No. 00'7, Fleet Post. Office, New York. ataria, clo Fleet P. O., Ban FrancLsro, N. Y.

INN OBCJIAIU) BILL Camp Waldron, U. S. Naval Tra.1nlng

Center, Farragut, Ida. JANE C. HIMES, 82/c, Naval Air 5tatJon .

CRlll. ENSIGN DEAN MARTIN, U.BB. Lawn-PFC. EDWARD C. EKSTEDT, 39204685, des APO No. 1&4. c/o Fleet Postmaster, _ 8 ...... ...,. B_ LI:De

Astoria, Oregon. 2ND LT. ERLING HOLAND, Roswell Army Air FIeld, Roswell, New Meldco.

Co. B, 119th Med. Bn., APO .f.4, c/o San P:nmc1sco, Calll. Post.master, New York, N. Y. PVT. FALES MARTIN, 3914M80, co. C-

405th F. A. Group, APO 5354, clo Poet- master, New York,. N. Y. master, New York. N. Y. PVT ROBERT II. MARTIN 39341884 136

a; STOP AT PPC. VERNON A. HOPP, Meld. Del.. 1256,

Engr. Combat Sll., camp Polk, lao cPt.. PAUL HVlDDING, 24 Weather Sq., MCChord Field, Wa.sh.

T/4 D. L. ERICKSON, 39323866, Hq. Btry, 1 735 RJwy, Opn. Bn., APO 5942, c/o Pofit-

PFC. ELMm. T. ERICKSON, Med. Del.. �. Co. A, APO 15416, c/� Po6�ter, 415tiJ. Inr.. APO 104, clo Poetmaster, New York, N. Y. A. F. JACOBS. 2869 Ea. 19th, Sheepshead New YOI"k, N. Y. I CAPT. HAROLD GARVIK OLSON, 0-����������� �£J1IJ/�

[ JOHNSON & ANDERSON

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On the Mountain Highway Parkland. Wash.

ANDERSON LUMBER COMPANY '9802 PACIFIC AVENUE

GRanite 731 1

SPORT CWTHES FOR GIRLS and BOYS ...--\ VISIT OUR NEW DEPARTMENT

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,

9TH and PACI FIC AVE. TACOMA

� .

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· _ <. _-

VOL. 22 . farifir iIut4rran �ollr!1e - .

November 18. 1�

.>

Attend the

.O.pe!:-a

No. "

GYM DRIVE STARTS MONDAY olf!.:. � !��n�� the

I Dormitory Auxiliary No. 2 Sponsors Opera Tomorrow Night Army (at least a part of it.) this Saturday

evening at 8:00 p. m. when coeds and The drtve to raise $175,000 among the their guests, servicemen from the Ond people ot Tacoma. wtll be otticlally under Engineers at Port Lewis, will gather in way next Monday &Iter a kkkoff banquet the gym tor a "soldier party," at the WInthrop Hotel. Coach Olson is Starting t.h1np ott with a �'\ �oe.n heading the active campaign and John S. ::

t=1r

an!c�O�=l= =�: Baker. prominent business man ot Ta· both donnltes and guests through thdr coma. w1l1 act u honorary chairman of paces. After "tea.rtng the gym to pleoes'�

the drlvr. Isabel Harstad, secretary to the the party will move to the reereatJ.on president, is operating an office in the room in Old Main, which :wU1 be made Rust Bui1ding during the campaign and ���::

r v� ::e b:nd�::

wUl handle all the clerical work. mittee. Program Chairman Agnes Ro­Cllft Olson, now personnel director ot leder and ber assistants will furnish vocal

the Todd-Pacific Shipyards. has served as I and instrumental music and other enter­d.1rector of athletics here since 1929 with talnment.

To complete the evening, Refreshments a leave of absence during the year '42-'43. Provider Anna Anderson and her cohorts

I Former Student To Be Director

"The Ba.rber of ae't'1lle," produced by the Lyric 'l1leater, Beattle, w1l1 be pre­aented 1n the Parkland. School Auditor­tum tomotTOW e'ft'l'llna. � director la Euaene LInden. conduct« of the Taooma Ph1lha.rmonic. Mr. Llnden, who attended PLC in 1940-41. ha.a made a apark1.tna new Engl1ah translatIon of thLs RoMtnl com­poolUon.

Paul Elmer who wUl appear aa the swaahbueklln& barber. sana the title role in "The Macrtaee of . Figaro" last year. PaUi is a brother or Rudy Elmer, PLC '38 and summer 01 '+&. who was active In musical organlzationa on ·the campua, and a member of the Ta.coma 81bellam dur-

During his years of service he built up wtn sUl?ply provisions for the "pause that I teams that gained national reputauon refreshes." Alter the run is over, Gerry lng tl1s attendance he«. which refieeted credit upon the Tacoma Olson and her helpers will tate over as Penta. Lamar, Bulgarian coloratura, wW area as the home or the "Leaping Lutes," the clean-up committee,

II sing the Ieadtng role of RosIna. Marjory Not only did Olson produce great football Myers will be heard u Berta and Ralph teams but he turned out several cham- Miller as Count Almaviva. others In the pion _ethan ,"uads during the """,e STAFF CHOSEN FOR SAGA cast !ru:lude Fletcher TWeed. Cyrus Brew-interim. II Work. has begun on the Baga.. At least I' er. and Rudy EImer. Ih acoe�t1ng the hon� chatrman- Bob lArson, bus1ncM manager, and Ruth ZUOBlfl: LINDEN '''nle Barber of Seville" la a com1c opera shlp of the drive Mr. Bater' stated that Jensen, assistant business m.anager. so I In two acta. It ta.tes place In the 17th his interest In the p� or PLC ex- declare. Thelr fIrSt Important job was to former PLC-l&e, wW d..lreet ""The 8aI"ber century In 8evWe. tended ba.ck. to th� years when our clean out the Sap. room, (We had to of Senile" here Friday The opera opens as Count Almaviva, fellows, handicapped by meager faclllties watch them 01' they would have put the who has fallen . In love with RoIItna, the for carrylng OIl an atbletic program. nev- overflow Into the K.M. off1ce.-that's ward of Dr. Bartholo, Ls aeren&d1nl her erthel ... _ .... """ _ national where It came from. cd&1naIlYl ) ANITA !lOTH GIVEN .. cia .... ......... be. "-Icoo>'.IIDIl _ recognition as champions. So far the .tait· -blClUdea Ann. Ander- an opporl;un1ty to meet' her. ThI8 is dIfft� -.

At DO time during the yean wh� the son, as.s1stant editor ; Grace Elaine Gul- LITERARY AWARD cult beca.uae Baztholo guarda her care-Lutes had. top ratlnp in the Wa.sbtngton haugen. advertising manager; Lois Toll- I tully, as he is anxious to marry her tar intereollegtate conference b&.5ketball did feldt. clrculatk>n manager. and Nora i AnIta Roth. freshman and Mooring her fortune h1maelf. The music muter, they have access to a gym other than J:tjesbu, senior ed1tor. : Mast reporter, Ls the winner of a llterary Ba.sUlo, Is &lao ·moUvated by a1mllar that at the Partla.nd junior high. And I prize recently offered by the Lutheran Ideals. Flgaro. the town barber, approach-::� == :;:

or.:te°��:!s ::: Larson Shows ' em How Herald. The fcllowlng letter. received by :ee-;:t ao:� the Count to lay plaru to

any practice flekl except the gt'llvel patch "Hey. that Ice Is wet" "How do you Anita.. tells the ta.J.e. In the aecood ,scene, the Count auc-

behind the school ever stand up on these thinp?" "We w1&h to congratulate you for your ceeds in gaining entrance by ualn&' the Falllng and sprawUng, sllpping and 8Uccesa In wtnnin8' a. prize in our Christ- dIsgu1ae of an intox:l.ca.ted so1d1er and

trlpplng, glldtng and slld1ng were the or- mas story contest. We were una.ble to gives Rosina a letter. Alcorn lteplaces Elson der of th1ngs when the ORO.'. held the Act Two ...... place In the mualc room

Ice stating pa.cty at the Lakewood loe decide between your story, "Davy's Plc- in Bartholo's house. The Count a.ppe&I1I , Dr. J. A. ELson, who came to PLC th1a

fall to head the Biology Department, left Tuesday. November 7, for C,llWorn1a, where he and Mrs. Elson w1ll spend the winter. Dr, Elsoo recenUy tendered hJs reslgna.tion a.s bIology professor because of III health.

Par the relnainder of the .school term, Dr. Oordoti D. Alcorn, from the UD.lversity of Waa.hingtoll, wlll Instruct the blolOCY classes. Dr. Alcorn Ls already known on the _campus, having .substituted for Dr. Elson. earlier th1a term.

Debate Squad Started The P .L.C. forensJc squad wlll hold its

first debate of the year TUe8day evening, November 28, in the reception 'room. The topic to be contended I..a the natlonal collegiate question concernlng oompulsory arbltaration of iDdtmtrtal dJaputes. Pol-lowing the debate between two teams composed of three students each there will be an informal di.scu.ss1on and coffee hour. '

The debate claas� nine �embers un­der the direction of lira. W. M . John8on has been fanned to otudi \be tocImlqne of _ and. to _to Ii. .... tIce .� and 'lnten:oneglate tournamenta. The debUera are lLUth Jobnsoo., liarp.ret EIIIII • . IlerJI _. Beverly _ Ela.lne &n1t.b. Marion Knutaoo, VIr'PI Savaae, Joe Reuehert, and Char'ks Bow� .......

Arena.. FrIday evening, Nov. 10. Pr1zea were given for the funniest and

for the most graceful skaters. As the fun­nJeat sta.ters. Lois Tollfeldt and Be*- l£r-son presented "How Not to State in Ten Hard Lessons." 8h1rley Morgan stated around giving everyone bltea of her pep­permint super-Size sucker which she won a.s the most graceful skater.

ture". and a. story by Mias Jean Strom as a mua.l.c teacher, announcing tba.t Ba.a­from St. Olaf and so we ha.ve divided the 1110 is W and has sent him In h1a stead money a.llott.ed. for .flnt and �nd prizes to give a leuon to Ros1na.. At this time evenly between you." The letter was stgn_ Pigaro 1naiste upon ahavin&' BarthokI, a.nd ed by the J4anaCing l!'.dJtor of the Luth- :

h:l�':e=: '::usandd.1f:ulC::U ::: eran Herald. I amODl' them the real mua1c teacher, who

Anita's story will appear til the Christ- suddenly arrives. After much action, "love maa lssue of the Lutheran Herald. conQUers allot and everybody Is aaUafJed.

THROUGH THE D.4.Y WITH .4. COED Thla ope'" .. being ....,.,....." by Dotml­

tory Awdliary No. 2 of Pac:Ifk: LUtberan 00Ueae. which .... ...- _ yea"a ''Oh, those llgbta! Why do they have -to RnTr1ng. Alll Saved by the bell! LyrIc Theater production. '

be turned on at 6:30 every morning? At lastl Cla.sses are over. and after mall TIckets are on sale at Pruer'a, Ted Brown's, Almvtg's, and PartlaDcl Llebt

and Water. _The price Ls tUO for 'adults an

� '1.00 for outside students and chll­

Can't a person even sleep' around here? Ho! Hum! Guesa I1l just tum over and rest an extra five minutes, just an extra.­ttve-mtnutesZZZJ:zzz:zz,

CRASH ! 'I'HUMP! BANG! "Gee Wh1z! I thought It was 6:30, not 7:30. Wbatll I wear, whatll I wear? My pink dress? No, It looks like It might be oold today. My grey skirt and white blouse? No, I forgot to bang them up Jaat night, and they're all mU!Sed up. I guess I'li ha,\'c to get out the old plaid at:1rt again, my one standby. It seems to be the only thing that doesn't wrinkle when it hangs In the closet.

"Now what do you t.b1nk about th1s?" aab tbe profesaor. "Does the end. Juatlty the meana In th1s stozy?.. A faint answer comes forth f� tbe back of the room.

Am -

l ever aettlng hungiy. Sure wtah thIa clUS would eod., "Ia th1s your oplnJon too, M1sa Jon-

"I can smell cabbage cooting. We must dre . The student body pun:haaed fltty be going to have a bolled dinner tonight." �:��� :ud: �

th:e!"=.=

call we either gather in one of the neigh­bor's rooms for a gabfest or retire to the peace of our own room to study,

The smell of cooldng food begins '� f addlti I ute from Inp John drive us more or less Insane until relief .Z) ona qu r -

cori1.ee at 6:00. Alter dinner is over. I settle down to a

long evening ot studying-I hope. Oc­casional lnterruptlons such ·as 'What darl­ing paJamaal' or 'Did you 88y that call was for me?' are heard down the hall, but' I plod wearUy on untU my Iesaona are presumably completed. 'I1lat is, presum­ably from. my a1ant; which Lsn't alwa.ys shared. �y those who rule over the morn­tnc aeaa1ona. But wby crosa bridgea nnd bOrrow trouble when an InvIting Ded. standa ready?

Ho, hum-e.notber day .

eOllfing events FrIday. November 17-The 8u'ber ., 8e­vtUe, 8: 15 p. m. at Parkland School Aud-

ltorlum. Sat.llrday, NOftmber 18-DPK Soldier

Party. 8:00 p. m. In coUege gym, TDeMay. Nowember �l-DPK 'I'bantII1v­I.ng banquet. W�,.. Nonmber D, i.e 8 .... ,.. N .. ...- _'l'IIaJW8\v!ng .... tIon .

......... __ 1I-2nd � <Joncer( LouIs Kaufman. vtollnJ.st.·

"

I .

.AOE ,","0

lIr4e .nnring Blast Publlahed f!ft!'Y two weeb durlnl" the 8Cboo1 year by

.tude:Dta of Paetnc Lutheran Ool1etre, otnee: R.cQ:n 130 Telephone: QRanlte 8811

But.eripUCIIl pr1oe-I1.00 per Year Bnterea &I ieeliii(I ClUi matter, OCtober 2, 1925, at tile Pmt

Oftloe Ilt P'lLrklaDd. WuhfnctOn, under the Act. of Kar'eh S, 1879.

i With the -1r I -Clites iN Service

- -- -.--.- �

November Ie, 1944

�fllJIIHi Last week end was an Lmpnm,ptu

'·homecoming" for a group of last year's

1 During tbe past. two weeks many of our gnduates. most of whom are now teach. : Cormer st.udents now (n the armed forces en. Those who rlsJted. the school were i have had an opportunity to pay brief Rhoda. Lee. who is teach.Lng at Everett.

vlsiu; to our campus Lois Ludwig. a.t Issaquah, Vlrginia Weh. EDITORIAL STAFF I Probably the biggest. change in temper- elson at Spanaway Virginia Seaburg. at

OO-EDITOU - - - ANITA. STUEN. ALICE BKUDIE I aLure was experienced by Frank Pavia, Clover Creek and catherine MOrTOw, who 6..Mociat.e Editor Theodore ReItz. 44 in the Infantry Just up from the l is taking a librarian course at lJl.e Unl-

Sports RelXlrter Walt Kunschak suno)' South Frank Is on his first fur- versitv of Washington

Reporters V1rg1.nJ.a Ia\1ct. Daphne Hel.lman Helen Anderson Aldys Bredvokl, '!'elms laugh and is visiting his parents and Helen Youngren. '42. paid a short v1sit

KebIpr, Beryl Bupn, Anita Roth, Ruth Johnson, Louise Tollfeldt. friends in

.

. hls hom� town. Tacoma. Here I to the campus on Saturday, November 4.

Adviae:r Mrs Ruth Franck Is his newest address: Fnt.nk J. Pavia, She l..s now 111 nurses training at a �&ttle CO. A. 33rd Batt. 6 Reg" Fort McClellan. h06pital. Alabama

� BUSINESS STAFF I ArdIs Jean Riegle, '43, was married to

aU8INES8 MANAGER

�t """'" _ aea.tary

.DOKOTIIY NIEMAN I Juniors and Seniors were especially : Ensign Robert F. Lemons. AugUSt. 13, happy to see Hal Bruun, student body 1944 In CharloU.wtne, Va. . . ...... Martan Butler president --two years agO, who paJd us a New leader for the evening school com� Inaa Jobnaon short cali on November 4. S 2/C Bruun munlty recreation center a.t the Gault.

AdverU&1ng :Manager C1rcula t10n

Corinne El1cbon is now reached at the following address : Junior high school In Tacoma Is Bertrum Cecelia O&rdlln �:8�h��:��ntoans" Co. C�15, F.P.O .. O. Myhre, '36. While attending PU::: Myhre

. Ann&beUe Btrk.estol was a member of the track. tennis and 6er'Vtcemen's C1rculatioo TI!d laler. PLC's 182 lb, foot.ball end I baseball teams and during his l8..'lt year Grace BirtestoJ l in 1942. had the opport�lty to return to was pr�ldent ' Of the A.S.a.· 8oUc1tors: Margie Ca.rlaon.. Grace Gulhaugen, Rumohr Guihaugen. J�lyn Lynne, his alma mater for a day last wef'k. Ad� I Last week Harold Gray, ex '44, teach�

Ruth Bjerkan, and Sylvia Blomlle dress: Ens. T. A. luter, USNA TB, Camp J er of mathematics, social scll!.nce and Adviser O. J. Stuen 4. Fort Pierce, f'la. h1story at Cl!>ver Park High School. W8..'l ____________________________ I While waiting to be sent out from [ ele::ted by the board of directors of Dis.

FROM THE PEN-PO I N T . . . .

•'"< -� I on the goodness of Ood. We are again approaching that time

which has been set apart as a day of I Thanksgiving. Once more we find a I troubled world . and this time a multitude

10f hungry people with whom we wish we � could share our dally bread.

. I While the dark. hard struggle that has As Tha.nksglvlng approaches, let us look I marred our festive splr1t for so long is back to our Puritan ancestors and recap� I not over, we are thankful that the light ture the purpose of this festive day. ' seems to be breaJdng at last. And we hold

Alter a cold winter marked by scanty I the fervent hope that. come this day next provisions. these staunch Pilgrim fore� i year, there will be no foxholes, no beach fll.thers, with the help of the Indians. heads, no unfinished busint'ss "over there.'· planted, and in harvest time reaped, a l We pray that our loved ones may again goodly supply of com. That fall. Governor I Join the family gathering Bradford began plans tor a special time I As we sit down to looded tables in our of worship to express gratitude to a k1nd comfortable homes, let us not forget for and bountiful Providence. This he called moment the purpose of Thanksgiving, "ThanksgiVing Day " and the great responsibility that a boun�

On the appointed day. each PUgrim ttruJ Providence has placed upon us brought his share ot Indian meal to eat "0, give thanks unto the Lord tor He

Bremerton Ray Dffl1. '4), was on the trtct 400 to the prtnclpalshlp of the Clover campus numerous times during tht' past I Park Junior High School. Me. Oray ftn­weeks. [ IShed the normal course here In 1931 and

Ed Berpa,el, '44, recently transf("Tr�d taught at the Midland School before to the medical corps and stationed at Ft. entertng the Clover Park system. It was Lew1s was sent to a new location a week not until this spring that he obta.1ned ago Monday. his B. A.

Jerry Enc-e, '44, has been transferred to Memph1s, Tennessee/'Address : Jerrol Rolf Enge, S llC, A.q,M. School, N.A.I(T Cen., Memphis, TelUlC&8e8. - Cltapel Quptes

Bill Ramstad, '42, son of Professor Ramstad, is now stationed "way beyond "Some people pennJt time to crowd out

the hUls of Idaho" at Mountain Home eternltY."-Dr. J. C. K. Preus. N.L.C.A ..

Mall will reach him at the following Minneapolis, Minn.

address: Lt. Bill Ramstad. General De- "The Go6peI makes u.s more than con-

livery. Mountain Home, Idaho, querors."

Les WhJtehe-o\d, ex '43. Is drlvlr,g a 8Up� ·'�othing is a.s uncertain as l1!e, and

ply truck In the U. S. Army . Precarious nothing Is as certain as death."-Dr, J.

health made 15 necessary for him to lel\.ve P. pflueger. a special school which he was attending. Address ' Pvt. LesUe H Whit.ehead. 191 12802. En!. Sec. SCU. 1976, Torney Gen. Hospital. Palm Sprtngs, Call!.

Waiting to be sent from the ·'out going unit· , at Farragut ls Stanley S. Whitehead. '42. His present address Is Stanley S. Whitehead. S. 21C, Brks UF. CRmp Scott. O. G. U., USNTC, Farragut, Idaho.

"Our own lives must be trans!onned to the power of the living word. Once our I1v� are transfonned the world can look upon u.s and see that the fruits of Ufe have been fuU1lled."

"In order to establish a place in etem� ity. we must establish It here on earth."­Cameron Hort, Chaplain, U, S. Marine Corps

with wild fowl and deer from the forest.<), Is good : tor Hi" mercy endureth fort'- Laura M. Ha.llI'e, ·36, and Robert C. "Unless we, 8." Americans, jealously Ha.uge. u '43, both have new addresses guard our rtghts and privileges, unless we Cpi. Laura M. Hauge, A909684, WAC Det overcome our Indltference to t.he thJngs Dutting the stre&s. not on the t.urkey, but ever. "-Ps. 136:1.

Tomorrow night the Lyric Theater Is thoroughly raked over the coals. The =, �:�:.' P��� �::���::'Ug���9�:;�5�, � :�!: ;� ;:m��I:: :�:e ;:ee:

again coming to Parkland. This Is a mal� objection was the ab,se,lce of "hu� I

1 l6th InL APO 29. c/ o P06tmaster, New ! people have expertenced.-Mr. Walter great privilege and opportunity for us. mar in our column. We agree heartily i York, New York. I Damrau, Sr., College of Liberal Arts. Those who went to l&.<it year's pertorm� Wi� this beef, but. we also ask you. why Rudolph Clarence Land, ex '4!, Is now

a navy mail clerk In PennsylvanlR. Ad� dress : Rudolph Clarence Lund, S 2!C, i ::��I

.vlng Ship Navy Yd., PhlladelPhla'

r Another new address In the files Is that i

ot "Eddy" Moline, ex '39. Address : Sgt. I

ANDERSON CROCUY __ Wuh. llR- _ SCHOOL SUPPLIES aad.

HOME BEIIEDIK8

don t. you take your penclls In hand and ance were delighted and expressed the do something about It? In order to give desire to have more of the same. Well. you an opportunity we are placing a box here It Is, and we hope many of you are for humorous and other contrtbutions going. It has some Incal talent In It; Rudy outside the MM. office, and we will gladly Elmer, who received his B.A. from the print Whatever seems usable, We enjoy

Education department, is a member of humor &.<i much as the rest of you do, and hereby cordially invite you to sit

the cast, His brother. Paul. sings the down and be funny!

E. A. Moline, 39200194, Bty, A-659--F. A ..

j

'------------_J Ft. Jackson, South Carolina,

.

@------------__

' [ title role. Dig deep in your pocket and extrRCt

the price of a ticket. U you are among the first fifty. you can get your ticket for $.25 (Lyceum prtvilege rates) from Inga Johnson.

With another eight months of study a the Harvard Graduate School of �usl

And yet another test week has been ness ahead of them. Norm Holm. ex '42

Uved through! and EVan Carlson, ex '43, fonner M. M

1

reporters. write that they wo�d like to hear from Pacific Lutheran. : Addr,�e.s are Ensign Norman Holm, Mellon- D�1 Soldiers Field, Harvard University, 80s ton 63, Mass., and Ensign Evan Carlson Chase E-ll, Soldiers FIeld, Harvard Uni­versity, Boston 63. MJ.ss .

The Rev. and Mrs. N. B. Thorpe are planning to make a trip to California to see their sons Burt, ex '43, and Jerrold '-H, who are both stationed 111 that state

Last week brought out the housekeeper in each of us. Those orderly persons who have all their knowledge stored in the right shelves had no trouble at all. Thooe who dusted their brain cells, and found the moths had ruined everything, could be seen doing the well-known "cram­ming." The rest of us wandered around in a daze, utterly confused, bewildered and " all wet"' (due partly to considerable pre� cipltation last week)

We are always trying to make the alumni proud of PLC. nus week, as al�

. ways, we �re proud of the alumnI In gen· eral and of ' one Lois Ludwig. '44 in par­tlcular. Lois gave a set of pottery dishes to the dormltory gtrls for their fudge kit.cbeD. She carried the dLshes to Park­land In her suitcase from Issaquah where she ls teaching the third. grade.

at. different camps waiting to be shipped ThIs week's census shows no lives l06t out. Addresses: EruJl&'D Burton D. Thorpe

and thuS we start on the next quarter USB LSM 126, c/o Pleet Post Offlce, San - of our school existence with renewed v1g- , Prancisco, Cam., and Jerrold Thorpe. S

Last Saturday everung at Ute Studen� or (we hope) and an honest intent to do 1 2/C, 38'70234, c/o Receiving Bits., Shoe Leader Meeting, the MOOring Mast was better. , ; maker, CaUf.

I COllEGE HAIRCUTS

PARKLAND BARBER

C. R. MARSH

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913 PI.cWc Ave. - -

November 15, 1044

LYNX RESERVES DEFEAT LUTES

In a. hani fOUQht, football game pla.yed at Uncoln on October 20 the Uncoln re­sen'es defeated an outmarmed, but not·

lfOSH :Diafll PK Story Correcled I T', .. o of the P .K,'1II at PLC "ere unin-

Nov. 8--Dlary. do you know It's exactly ' tentionally omitted from the article, "P. 1 :30 A. M.! 111 be needing props to I K.'s. not K. P.'s Keep PLC Runnml." In hold my eyeBds up-tU'ld did you notice the last iSsue of the Moor1n¥ Uut.. So. the lovely sultcaAes under my eyes? here {.hey are :

Studied Camp for three hours_ Don't Ra�h Pflaepr, frelllhman In the College

KalllplIS KOJHbliHjS On a camping trip the oth�r week-end

LOUISE TOLLPELOT and her mount paTted eomPILllY ' 8.t I\. eruellll mommt:

"I didn't know the horse was a high jumper." LouISe explained later. "When

outfought PLC eleven by a score of 18 to mention clauses-no. not even Sant.a! of Education until September. was from It went up and ov�r the f�nee, 1 went 7 Nov. 9-0h Diary-had that �xam today ! Seattle. but now her hom� is Odessa, ov�r and down. After this 111 ��ther carry

The contest was much closer than the My only regret is that I had only one W8..Sh .. even If she hasn't bet'n there yet. Ii parachute or walk. " paper to give to my Comp ( teacher) I Sports is thLs future p, E. Instructor's

score "",ould indicate Hard J clean play I am appositive It 1 see imother predlca - hOOb) Her father the Re, E R Pflueger, was featured throughout the game ment complement 111 go Cl"RZV Guess is pastor of CbtLst s Lutheran Church Last Thursday the 3rd floor of the

Od 55a dorm was a. mass of matt.reS5e8, plilows, The largest flourlsh at scoring came In I I m Just an Idiom I I �jordb R�n, Junior In the College of and blankets-a.nd it wasn't spring house-

the �ond period The Lutes drev. flrst i N:�isl�

e���; �::��ln

Wk

en�e���ka::� Education t.s from Woodburn, Oregon cleaning. either. NORMA ELLEFSON and blood The scoring play that culmlnRted. Is b ddl So j H I I tood Her stnglng of the alto solo In the ChOir 8 RUTH JOHNSON exchanged rooms wu,,h

a Lute drive from midfield was a (en-owner a u ng n a en e s

I rendition of 'Beautiful Savior 1s known one another. Ruth t.s now rooming with )ard sprint around left end b) letthaJf �:re

a':u7�m :::_�I�dS8t�:o

��rl:: to everyone Jert sings In the sextette DONNA BETTY JOHNSON ftnd Norma's and on any Sunday morning' she can be toothbruSh wlll hang beside that of Gerhard Rosin. Earl NOrdeng carried the night Just think-no mor� clauses no Sf'en directing the Messiah Lutheran JACKIE VERTREES.

ball over on a Quarterbe.ck sneak to add more phrases-no more students class- Church s choir In Tacoma. Her father the extra potnt. The Lutes threatened time dazes-for t .... o whole da,s" the Rev H Ragen has passed away but several times to score aga..ln but lacked the necessary punch to strike pay dirt.

Uncoln scored two of Its touchdowns the second Quarter. Both scores were- maeJe

Fine Art Studios

,Clltc ,CllSsics TeTION By Daphn� Hellman

FLOWERS FOR

THANKSGIVING

. her older brother. Alvin, who attended : PLC. 1936-37. Is now a mlnl<;ter at Madi­

son, Minn.

WHO'S WHO

C (9..hput. C&. M O R T U A R Y -- -r-"- . -�,., I . ' _

DISTINCTIVE PORTRA ITS

Have Your Gift Photos for

CHRISTMAS Taken Now

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S E L D E N ' S Fint in Floor Coverinp ..

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P-,ACIPlC LUTIIKRAlf COLLEUE

--------------------------�· 1 .... . --«j$ ... �� �;o...�. " ': ' · TA· ...

Novtmbtt UI, UK ..

CLUB NOTES 00 YOU READ ·A.MONG THE FRE.SHMElY NOON DEVOTIONS

" 1 Met the Savior Pace to Pace" was fame In bY portray&! of irandma in the Betty Lou RIeke, featured .., lfIolin \ OR EAT YOURS? I Goroon Oano . .,ho made ov ... _t [ _tor.

the title of Ute vocal solo sung by Jo Three guesses u to the IJlO5t inhabited immortal "Little Walt Rld1na Hood." has soloist on PLC's radio proeram. Beptem-�NQOQ· c.voUana,...:I'bunda,f, No.- �� Par�d at 8 A. M. and, S P. M. �!i � the campus tor candk1 ' bu-X.- aomea......tmm- ca.atunere. Waahtn&".: _ vember �. Nora Kjesbu rave the scrtptUl"e daily. The dorm cont1ncent naturally has ellen By th1a Ume. he baa undoubtedly ton: Bhe baa studied vtoUn 101' RveraJ reading &nd p:-ayer. the edge on the rest of the populace. nu- bullt up a boOmiI;lB bualnea: In blaekm&1l. years and. "baa jotned our orchestra at

A slnpplrationa.l led by President Oer- mer1c:ally as well as emotionally. as the No fair! He's bln'er than the rest of us! PLC. _ ���=o:�= :�r the pre-

:: .. �d�.::ke�1c1:�:� :��� Leta Metcer almost met henelf com- "J� cousins" paUenUy expl&1n Pat I air at the new Par� post office. The inc back last FrIday attemoon. She .t- and LoraIne PurTis. who threaten · &0

MISSION SOCIETY . fortWUlte ones with mall read thelra avtd. tended mom1n& cla:sses h�re, took a. mU&lc catty 'lround a phoOocraph record to "Home !4.las1ons" waa the theme of a Jy on the "8)' tack. to school, while those ! lesson in Seattle, and was bact in time [ answer that eternal "Anot.ber ailter .leU"

d.l.scuaaion led by Dorot.hea. Ofstedal at who haven't anY, step off at "Andy's" for I for the stating party P"rkiay evenln&'. question. , Il1ss1on Soclety Wedneeday, November 1. a coke to drown their sorrows. I The Freshman cla.sa bouts a set of I The P'rOIsh cIU: has another slater team The pt"OgI"aln included the followtna bum· The student with "ea.ting mall" is un- twins. l.oui5e and Lola Tollfeldt. Some I (not twine) Orace Blaine and Rumohr bets "A Moment in the Morning," a doubtedly tbe moat popular person in the say they don't. look alite at all, while I Gulbagen, who hail from Aatorta. Oregoo poem read by Telma Metzger, vocal &010, dorm, and that llttle slip that says to call some are sure one Is the "splttin' tmap" Be&kiea being the s1stera of Marty QuI­�Lo&t in the Night;' by ved\a HU8eboe, at the window for a package always I of the other Anyway, they're not roomtnc haaen, Pormer reporter now serving in Reading enUtled "The Man 'nlat Died causes a stir ot excitement, for it could together here "Why should we?" aats the armed forces in Italy, they have the ' For Me," presented by Ruth BJerta.n; A I be, and sometimes ls. something besides J Louise :'We've done 'that for the la.st 18 further cUstincUon of being the valedic-trio composed of Norene St1lbred, Grace that lloeekly laundry from home' ! yean ' tortan and aalutatorlan respectively, of �ine and Rumohr

" .Gulhaugen � I � Have you met "Evening Helmet"? That. last. year's graduating class at Astoria

'Thy Word, Oh Lord , and a. poem Bee- I LITTLE SYMPHO ' is the Engllab translation. we hear. of HIgh School. con Lights" given by Leta Metqer. • NY l our good Swediah friend, AIton Hjelm. �=============io D-P.K. ' ADDS INSTRUMENTS Evangellne Ahrendt. although only ".

The Reverend A. R. Kettner, pastor of I Professor Malmln bought. an alto darl- is beginning her second year as vice-pres­lAlther Memorial Church in Ta.coma, will i net for the "Little Symphony" last week. ! Ident of the Northwest District of Luther be guest speaker a.t the DP.K. Thanks- Lois Tollfeldt is going to play it. ' Leagues of the Amertcan Lutheran . giving banquet Tuesday, NoveInMr 21. In I Dorothea Ofstedai is the new nute play- Church. Her home is In RJuville, Wash- i

IROOKDAU LU MIEIl CO.

�ALB. WA8B. the dining room. Acting as Master of er. "Sarge" Gulhaugen is tackling the big mgton, where her father is a Lutheran I Ceremonies wtll be Dean of Men Nelson. string bass. Loraine Purvis plays the ---� � i :============::: Arlene Cordes heads the decoratlng com· trumpet and Joe Heuchert has started r Mrs. Frisbee' 8 mlttee and Agnes Roleder is in charge of with the bass horn Last Tuesday the I the program for the dinner orchestra presented the chapel program Bakery LSA

by playing three selections FOB FINE IlAKEBY PRODUCTS

The LSAA regional conference sched- S C Eastvold Mrs J P Pfiueger ad-710 SO 31th St. Phone OA.7591 Wed for the PLC campus Dec. 2 and 3 v1ser of the group, presided at. the cere- t!I i9 has been postponed. A detinIte date has mony.

not been set, but the meeting wUl be held I For the bener1t of the new members sometime In late February. Ruth Jensen explained the goals and

The local LBA. is planning a fellowship Ideals of the LOR. Gerry Olson and Helen meeting wlPl t.he Luther Club of the U. I Lund were elected delegates to the DUI­

of W. This wUl be held on a SUnday ! t.rlct. LDR Convention to be held In Ta­afternoon soon after the Christ.mas VBca-J coma Nov. 12. tlon. 1 Mrs. Pfiueger led In SCripture reading, ! and several hymns were sung by the

During an 1mpress.Jve candle light cere- i mohr Gulhaugen. sang a solo.

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50 per cent wool & r�yon All Colon

$7.50 and $9.85

RAU'S CIDCKEN DINNER

. INN

STOP AT Lundquist-Lilly

LD.R. i group. Gerry Olson. acc')mpanled by RU- I . mony this year's officers of LDR were ! Hostesses for the occasion were Mrs. installed. at a meeting held Wednesday, I B. C. Eastvold. Mrs. J. P. Pflueger. Mrs. October 25, at the home of Dr. &.nd Mrs. I J. Enge, and Mrs. K. A. Holstad. I .! _____ =========� �fjll]1�

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Legal Re.ertle Life lruurance for Lutheraru * en. aDd ChDdreD aces from _ to 85. The ............ d LutIImon IIINMUl'OLIJI _ 1. _ _ IIIHNUOTA .. YOUR FUTURE . 1Irotberhood. oWn the 10-_. aDd tile>' alone re-.ohe the -- STARTSTODAY Tbere are DO stoctboId-....

Paaiftc LulMnll Callete Clifford Olton. Aptot .'

P •• ld."". W_h1ftClOll

VOL. 22 Dt'ccmber 14, 1944

CHOIR OF THE WEST

More Shopping

Days

. --� - --- �--No. 5

Choir Leaves On 18th Tou ..

Opening Concert at Gethsemane Lutheran With Dean Nelson count.ing noses, the

PLC "Choir of the West"---compJete with conductor, gowns, stands, chaperonB, pitch pipes ILnd 56 slngers-wUl board 8. 3 :55 p. m. Seattle-bound bus this afternoon fot a rive-day trek to polnts north.

Another war-time choir trip finds the musicians lraveUng �y bus, train, and shoe-leather (watch your shoe stamps when this loot-sore group retunu).

First stop wUl be tonight at Beattle where the choir wUl present the fin;t concert In l-helr 18th choir tour at Oeth­semane Lutheran Ohurch. I After a night's rest the songsters will

: catch the morning train for Everett, at­I riving in time lor late Christmas shoppers to purchase ti18.t last gift. The evening concert wlll be given in the Civic Auditor­Ium.

Saturday the choir, slter being pro-­vlded with maps of Stanwood, wUl pro-Len. to ril'ht, front row: Marion SoItman, Emma Thoren, Betty Wrir1ey, Delores Keller, Geraldine Olson, Patricia Funis. ceed by rail to that "city of cities:' Here,

Lydia Lentz, Helen Anderson, LoIs Dahl, Rumohr Gulhau.,en, Annie Uen. G. J. MalmJa Second row: Ruth Jensen, Acne:s wltb Dorts Jurgenson as guide, Ute group Roleder, Miriam Hopp, Lillian He"em. Helen Marte Land, Norene SkJlbred, Louetta Brunner, Afton Hjelm, !\rd.is Severson, will wend Its way to Our Savlor's Luth­VNa Jean McCoy, Dorothy Rasmussen, HJordis Roren, Betty Lou RIeke. FTanceUe Schoch. Third row: Anna Anderson, Anita eran Church ror an evening concert. Stuen. Ved.b H.1ISIeboe, Agnes Myk1and, Janet Haule, Norma Ellefson, Sylvia BlomeUe, Dorothy Nieman, Jacqueline Vertrees., Ruth Still heading North the Choir will reach Towe, Grace Elahle Gulhaucen, Doris Jur�n, Jeanette 8un:!art, Dorothea. Ofstedal, Ruth Fosso. Back row: Robert Larson, Erllnc Norden,-, bar Pfhl. Vernon Elstad, Roy � Lee Folsom, Russell MarTaY, Gordon Gano, Theodore Reitz, Ma.:l:well Vet� Joseph Heuchert, Gerhard Rosin. Walter Lopdeo, Edward Berndt, Albert KIlhn, EllIene Anderson.

SENIOIfS GIV� !I "I'm Dreaming of a Christmas Long Ago NATIONAL HONOR Of Blazing Yule Logs, Frost and Snow"

Mt. Vernon for a Sunday afternoon con­cert in the high school apd1tor1um, Fol­lowing thIs a. non-stop dash will bring them to Bellingham In time for an eve· nlng concert in that city. Art .. dng on Monday, the choir wW don Its red flannels and be.cktrack to Seattle.

Three senior women from our campus : Do you recall your first Christmases, 1 German treats of lebkuchen. sprlngerle, Here landlubbers will be given a. thrUUng have been chosen to have their names I the lighted tree, the stocking at the : and pfetrernusc. hour and a halt ferry ride to Bremerton. and biographies printed In the 1944-45 I hearth. the exciting present.<;? Of course : When Dr. Eastvold was small, all the With Max Vetters on the plkh pipe, the edition of WHO'S WHO AMONG STU· I you do. and even the faculty likes to families In the congregation would bring choir will sing In Our savior's Luth­DENTS IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES ! "remember back when-" I their presents to the large Christmas tree eran Church. A few numbers w1ll a.I.so be AND COLLEGES. Chosen for this honor I

'

Miss Nielsen's first .Chrlstmases were in the Lutheran Church. After the church sung at the YMCA and the Lutheran

are Nora Kjesbu. Marjorie EdghUI. and spent on a attle farm to Iowa. She re- I program in which every child had Ii part Servloe Center. Emma Thoren. All three are senIors and t members especially the Christmas prc- ! the gift.<; were opened and candy was Returning home late Monday evening. members of Delta Rho Gamma. I gram In their llttle one·room, district I distributed to all. the Singing studenloJ will be given time

Nora KJesbu has teen prominent In I school. On Christmas Eve she and her I North of Trondhelm, Norway, where to wash the dirt off their necks, go to DRG and is the present vice-president. I brother would each label a chair and Mr. Stuen spent his first Christmases Tuesday classes and be on hand for the She Is vice president Of

.

AWS. Senior I there they would find their gifts in the there arc mountains covered with snow. home Christmas concert in Trtn1ty Luth-representative to the ,Cabinet. and a morning. He remembers going with his father and eran Church. member of the Viking Club Nort.hern MInnesota, where Miss Bl()m- brother to get their Christmas tree and Under the baton of Prof. G. J. :Ma1m1n,

Marjorie Edghlll Is from Tacoma and 1.s I �u�st

o�IV:

o�S :

n���

�:

tl:

s.sw�

k:n

t�:� nearly getting lost In five feet. of snow. the choir (�:.���:: =u:; of songs.

a student In the Department or Educa- I Swedish ancestors her family always 101- Oranges and apples seen only at Yuletide,

tlon. were preciOUS gifts beneath their tree. lowed the custom of eating luteflsk on Dr. Ronning recalls espeela11y the SAVE FOR. SAGAS Emma Thoren has been an active mem- Christmas Eve.

I Christmas Eve festivity. After an ample ber ot the Choir or the West during her Mrs. Franck began accumulating her I meal the family would sit around the tree SOLICITORS URGE years on the campus. library on her third Christmas. She re- whUe the father read the Christmas mes- Start savin' those 8hllUIts ye everbroke

The candidates were recommended by caBs receiving two books, one of BIble sage. Then gifts were distributed and lads, an lasalea be savin 'em wo. 'I1s a. the facult.y scholarship and curriculum stories and one of nursery rh�es. The everyone ate apples, oranges, and candy. word to Ute wise aa ye ct\ll swml8e so committee and elected by the facuity. nursery rhymes book _had colored pictures , Although llving in America, Mr. Mal- ye'n be ready' when your yearbook pay-

(ConUnued on Pa.&'e 3 ) -and this fact d�termined Mrs. Franck's I min's famUy always had a Norwegian ment comes due . . _________ _____ I first I1terary choloe. I Christmas. He remembers his father Robert Lar&ln, buslnes.s .manager of the

Dr. Pflueger's first Christmases were I placing a sheaf ot grain outsIde fo� the 1945 Saga, has six sol1cltors who will take /7/tu�iun �/1CJt"S I spent on Ohio's Capital University Cam- birds' Chrtstmas. '\ orders for Ute annual and collect pay-V""'''''U . ,,"VI 14 pus, where he was born and spent his In Profess<Jr Ramstad's chlldhood vl5it.- menu. Carol EIefson and LoI5 . ToUteldt Thursday, December 14, to Monday, De- early childhood. The Christmas tree was l ing loomed large In the Christmas ��s- have charge of Ute front. and rear sides

cember 18--Choir trip. I not yet common In America so the Uvltles, an Institution he sUll enjoys. respectively on the third floor of the Tuesday, December 19--All-school formal Pflueger tannenbaum attracted conslder- j Between Christmas and New YlCau/YUle- df,nn; girls on second floor w1ll make

Christmas banquet. Choir Home Con- able attention. The tree was lit wlth·wax tlders wearing masks would go from door payments to Jean Lovvold; b<Jys ·in dorm C€rt at TrinIty Lutheran Church. I candles and had Ute Bethlehem scene to door receiving treats at every home. to Ivar P1hl; day students wlll contact

Wednesday, Deoember 20, to Tuesday, beneath It. On Christmas day his tamlly Because his father was a florist, Dr. Walt KunschBk and Sylvia Blomel1e. January 2--Chrtstmas vacation. I and the stu�ents from the dOrmitory en- Ranson's most prominent recollection of The total coat, including taX, w1ll be

Wednesdal\ January 3-Back to classes. I joyed a bountiful meal including the (Continued on Page 3_1 . three dO.llars and nineteen cents. 1Q��-;L;De- .

_nn�nnDDOnnnnnDnnDDenennnDnn

.1\0. TWO

m�p i1IIlooring i1Rallt .w.Uahed � two WttD durIng the lIChool year by

studenta of Paclflc Luthertn COllege. 6fneO: RNiiii 130 ""_, .. - 8011

Sub8crlptton price-tl.OO per Year Entered u second clUs matter. October 3, 1926, at the �

Offlce at PartJ&.nd. 'Washlngton, under the Act of March 3. 1819. �

EDITORIAL STAFF

-.' - --- .... -�-- . .. '

December It. 1944

With the -* i:Jltes in Service I pre, Marvin F. Shaw. ·t3, who hIM been L Navy 3205, Fleet Post Orrlce, Ban l"rall­I wCII.ffiaea s:eno\lS1Y �ra:r- ·t:trrrtt dttri� � ca.u.tamla.. �nt� he . wrc-te to

action In North Arrlca, .Italy, arid south- Dr, Ronning "from a South Pacif1c is­ern France, Ls now at the Baxter General land."

OO-EDITOU . .. .... _ANlTA STUEN', ALlCE B&UDm

Hospital In Spokane. His mother, Mrs. 'Earl H, MaeConnell. studen� here the Shaw, from Tacoma.. visited him the lat- flrat of this school year and known to ter part oC November and said that. he many u the "photographer," is now a.t was getting up a lIt�e while each dt.y Camp Hood, Texaa, He expects to go to and walklng. with . a cane. He lS very Officers' candidate School after basic anxious to get to the Coast to see PLC training. HlS addres.s b Pvt. Earl MacCon­and hls frlen�, but. will have to remain neU 39481314, Co. D, 149th Tr. Bn. Camp

. ..... _ .. . Theodor-e Relts Sporta Reporter . .. . .... Wa!t.' Kunschak Reporters: Vl.rginia I.!Y1ct., Daphne Hellman, Helen Anderson, Ardys Bredvokl, Telma

Metzcu, Beryl Becgan, An1ta Roth, Ruth JohruIOn. Lou15e ToUfeldt. at. the h05plt.S.t some time Cor treatment, Hood, Texu. .

BUSINESS MAN'AGBB.

AdverU&1ng Manager C1r'culaUon .

�USINESS STAFF

Mrs Ruth Franck Marv was Associate Editor of the M. M. DonaJd GUbettson, ex '41, hM been sent when he left. a yesr ago last lIprtng. to Colgate Unlverslt.y for treJnlng III the

.... .DOROTHY NUMAN �:::: :�cp'I:,

�:;-dF.=,W�po

B::� Navy Academic Refresher Unit IV-7"

I Donald entered the navy In June 1944 . . ................ Marlan Butler Washington. Addre.s.s: D. B. Ollbert.son, 8 3/C. V-l .... _Inga Jobn...oon It took the M. M. to 'tell AI Nordenr, Unit, Box 1103, Colgate University, Ham1I­

Corinne EzicUon ex '43. that hLs brother Erl Willi playing ton, New York. .. ...... Cecella audlln on the football team. A.l has been out at I JacII. Bn.Ule, ex '43, who was prominent

- sea for some time now and has 'been at ' In sport.'J while here at PLC, can be reach-Servicemen', C1rcul.tioo Annabelle Birll.esto1 Honolulu. HLs new address t.s Ensign ed at his station In England by the fol-Exchange .... ... Grace Blrtestol H. A. Nordeng, U. 13. N. R .. U. 8. S. lowing address : Lt. Jack Bratlle 0-SOUcltors : Ma.rgte Carl&on. Ot'a.oe oulhaugen, Rwnohr Ouihaugen, Jocelyn Lynne, Yancey A. K. A., 93, c/o Fleet Post OfClce, 2068S81, APO 16634, B3' 35, c/o P. M., New

Ruth BJerkan, and SylVia Blomlle. San Francisco, CaltfornIa. York, New York. O. J. stuen I Krnnet.h Obon, ex ·t3, after being sta- I Another new address: 18 that of Lt.

tloned at Ft. Lewis for Quite some time Is WIIJ,S Fobom. ex '37: Lt. WUlys Folsom, ---------------------------- . now overseas. His new address Is Cpt. 119 MCB SQuadron, APO 728, clo PM, I Ken. A. Olson, A S N 39193321, 3325 Sd I Seat.t.Je. Washington.

I A M Co. APe 655, c/o Poetmaster, New Bob Uaqe. frosh In 1942, is now In the , York, New York. Infantry. Address: Pfc. Bob Hauge, Co.

The Christ. ChUd brought to the world hope of peace on earth, good wHl to men. cpt Rod,.er Lunde, ex 't2, Willi killed In P. 116th Int., APe 29 c/o P. M. New York. That hope has not been reallzed. perhaps because we have not taken seriously the action while serving with an Infantry lUllt RDdy Johnson, ex 't3, who was in the fact that Ute Christ Man gave HUth as Ute means of fulfUUng the hope brought by '[ fighting ln Gennany, accotdlng to a Invasion of Brest, received hu Tit rating Ule ChUd. Hope is an Ideal of things still to be attained. Paith L'I the substance of , message from the war department to. his several months ago. He Is now with t.he things hoped (or. It Implies acceptance in the present of what Is desired for the future. I parents Mr. and Mrs. William Lunde QC aUted torces In Western Europe. Address :

If )-'e have (alth ! Parkland. He wa.s a member of the I Sgt. Rudolph B. Johnson, �91t5759, Tr. But as a grain bn..sketbaJl squad while attending college. "B" 15th Ren Sq. APO 339, c/o PM, N. Y.,

Of mustard seed. . . Captaln Walter Simonson, '40, of the New York. Thus spake t.he Master long ago. Army Air Cor�, was a recent vWtor on Special mention should be made In Ulls And earth and sea and air have proved the campus. He has been In the service column at a giCt 'of $2.00 to the M.M. b ThB.t by nlan's wtll they may be moved, for three and a hair years and was here lEd SandviJ, ex '44, who lB now at the Orea When he has faith on part of a furlough alter 27 months of La.lI:es Naval Center. This should make

duty overseas. He has been stationed In some at our students realize how much t.he Hawaiian Islands. Captain Simonson the "boys" care about receiving the M.M

But as a grain Of mustard seed.

If YE have falUl But as a grain

or mustard seed . So rings the challenge stilL Then war and death and hate wUl go And peace and life and love ye'll know. IF ye have faith

But as a gra.1n Of mustard seed.

-Gee Reneau

WIt.S associate editor of the M. M. his last. and make us willing to give more to year here. Address : Capt. W. A. Simonson, sending the school paper to the servl AAF Fleed Gwmery School, Foster Pleld, men. Victoria, Texas. BU. Croft, ex 't1. has the Collowln

EnslJll Bert L BUldt, '42, is stationed new ad�: Pvt. BUss Croft, 19022405 tor a short time In Miami, F1orlda. Ad­dress : �Ign B. L. BUldt, Villa D'Este 417. USNTC, Miami, Florlda. A classmate at his here at PLC In 1942 was EnslJll Kenneth M. Johnson who is stationed at i the same . place. His address is Ensign Kenneth M. Johnson, Villa D'Este 415, USNTC, Miami, Florida.

HQ. 18 Corps (A.B.), ABC Detach., APO 109, c/o P05tmaster, New York, New York.

New address : Woodrow W, Arneson, '38, P 2/C, E .. Dlv., USB South Dakota, P1eet Post Office, San Francisco, CaUf. Lt. (Jr) J, Alvin Arne, '38! Navy Detachment, Port Plagler. Wash.

CHRISTMAS 1944

Dear Santa, I Instructor In the high school depart· ment and dean of men here last year, also

This year please bring a lIt.t1e doll A rag one if you can. Aw nuts I Just skip the ragged don Bring me a rugged man.

To whom honor is que should honor be given. Therefore, you w111 find In this graduate of the Junior college In 1937, edition of the Mooring Mast the first Quarter honor roll-those students earning a W. C. Schnackenberg (Schnack), is now a grade point average of 2.25 or better. Our hats off to these ambitious students-let's ' com.m.l.ssloned ensign. lib address is: have 8: longer llst. next quarter. Ens. W. C. Schnackenberg, Rec. Sla.,

But no honor roll can include the names of all those deservlng a place on It; _______________ C _____________ _

neither is an honor roU an infalllble criterion of scholastic ab1llty. There are, for LnStance, the students who are carrying ext.ra credit. hours, outside work, extra-cur rtcular actlvitJes, and. so forth. They may have Ule abillty and the urge to do top Cltapel Quotes notch 'ROrk; but because .of these other duties they cannot make the marks necessary Homemade troubles �are like old-time but the things oC the spirtt ,whi.ch survive. tor the required grsde average. clothes; they seldom fit and they last. a -Nora Kjesbu, College of EdUCRtlon

We are not dlscred1Ung students who dJd "make" the honor roll ; we want simply long time. Sentor to point out that the honor roll does not list aU those who are deserving of scholastic -Pres. S. C. Eastvold Character is to ha.ve sp1rttual power, bonor. Everything that. we have or receive to say no over against all evil: character

Sometimes we hear "what were good to be done" so often that we become weary wtUl weU-Usten1ng, without reaching the DOING stage. PerhaPS that's the situation between us and the UBuy a War Bond" appeal. Added

to th1a Is the convenient "Th�t Lsn't for me, fu golDg to college" alibi.

comes Crom God. 15 to have strength to say Y,es over agalnst -Ted �itz, Liberal Arts Sophomore aU that 15 good and noble and true. The real freedom that. we need lsJree- Everything In this world Is tor the bene­

dom from the tyrant at our own hearts- fit. of man, and man is the IMtrvant of the tyrant of sin and selfishness. ( God. If we fall to serve, we fatl to llve.

-Prof. J. P. ) Pfiuege} -Rev. O. L. Jensen, Pastor of the It is the things of the world fth�� Messiah Lutheran Church, Tacoma

However It is, our oontribution fo the war ettort via the purchase of bonds and I stamPS Is something abort of heroic. Tbe sale among students amounts to only a tew ANDERSON CROCERY dollara a. week when It should. and could, be much more, Parkland. Waah, ,OR, 8580 I BERCLAND HARDWARE co.

"Im�lel" you say. We're short on spending money as It is." Now we're not SCHOOL SUPPLIES aDd. NIl PAOIPIO OR. 8'!80 gettmg tnquJ.stuve. we're not aat1ng how you �nd that spending money, and we're I DOME REMEDIES

not campaigning aga1Dst rnich Uttle luxuries M cokes or between meal maw at the Bug, College We wouldn't be normal without them. But after all, there is a good old "-------------.... 4============::! word the oneb Imew�ra.t1on. And moderation might be helpful to our health 1 "'-------------.. • future· figure aDd tho ...... efforl. '!be price of two � and. a couple of cokes • week adds up to enough for a baby bond per 6Chool year. We invite-yOu to do your own arlthmeUc M to what your pot.ent1al war boDd capacity is on that baaia.

COlLEGE HAIRCUTS

PARKLAND BARBER

C. R. MARSH

Whoa ,.. . _ _ ___ C. FRI!D CHRlmNSEN

8TATlONQ <Rooenburp) Remember it wor-b two ways-you help younelt AND your country, How about I the slogan-Buy .a snaCk, 'but buy a war stamp first I - • _____________ ..... ... 9�1.:.3.,;Pacl1Ic,;;;.;;;;,,,;A;;ve,,;.;,... ___ ;;BR.::..:-= ...

-= ........ , -- - � . . .. ,"" ... . �"':'-.'.-"!'-11: ..-:::-,-�-

... .. -> December a, 1944.

PACIP'IO LUTHERAN COLLEGE PAGE T'HRBE LUTES WIN 2ND GAME P P

, ,

The P. L. C. basketball �m turned ",lite ",Ilssies TeTION I in u.s second wl.n ot the current season B" Da-"-- H-'�-n I, KAMPUS KOMBINGS

by defeating the McChord Field F1re- .I VU'o""' ..-uuur. men, 51-39. Watch It! Don't crowd her ! Hey, break i ··IJeck !.he halls with boughs of boIly." from her mother recentJy. It read : "Both

'I'tfe' l"lte1l".l€'n tOOk an early lead, chalk- t.hat d.ribhlc� Where's the.. �1 li9ld When those two peppy "Roy BOYS," RAY oow &.ltd calf 'are dolng tine."

ing up 8 points before the Luteg were e\'erylh1ng! It's a toss up-no. it's basket- t IDtAMMER Inc! WAl.:iT KlJNeeH'� took- If- the alt.enMon alven \.be... bu1l.dlna oC

able to break into t� scoring column baU! And believe it or not, the baskets I to the tall Umbers Saturday and came the new statiWay 18 any lndJeation, P. L. C.

The College team began slowly to eut are used occasionally, too, (the exception back with a truek.load of Cbrlstmas trees, 1'..as a lot oI buadlnr ··sta.i.rww.y-buUders."

dovm the lead of lhe1r opponents and �elng Ruth pnueger who can really throw they brought us a load of fir. JrtIle, and ANNABELLE CHRISTENSON, ARDYS lbe end of the first halt saw them 'hOld-

em tn.) hemlock trlmmlngs. too. Only one thing, BREDVOLD, and BERYL BERGAN are tng the slim margin of 19 to 15. Cowd be that we nlUst attribute that I boys, where's the mistletoe? so enthusiastic over their dramatics claM

The entire third quarter and part of ' sklll shown on the floor to th05e pre- Speaking of trimmings, there'll be no that. they are wUUng to dye for It. Last the fourth were much the same as the I llmtnary setting-up exercises. Etta Claus- more straight hair for our three Coed- I Tuesday they turned ten yards of monLs­first hal!. During this time the lead , sen Is left so weak from laughter ("&" cuUes, RUBY PETERSON, JACKIE VER- cloth from tan to red and green for cos­changed hands frequently with neither I as In awful) that she turns up misslng on TREES, and NAOMI TRUSSELL. In that I tumes in theIr Christmas production, t.eam able to gain a commanding lead. about every other "touch your toes and continual battie of fog vs. feminine flurf, "Why the Ch1mes Rang."

It v.-a.s In the four final minutes of get lumbago" exercise. Of course that's the fog must have won out, for aU three SUp! Skld! Crash ! Owwwwwl The play that the collegians hit thelJ' stride I bad enough but when the rest of us have fems acquired permanents over the te- board walk leading to the Ubrary Is plenty and sewed up the ball game. The� four : to do It on the double, to castanet ftC- cent holidays. Icy these cold mornings. Put on your minutes saw the Lutes hit the basket I companiment, It's even more SQ, Casta- P. L. C:s Christmas spirit seems to be brakes and leave for your classes early. \lith tulelTing accuracy to score 16 points I nets? No, not really. Just Anita (leave coming to a bead in rOQm '416 ot the girls' That's the only wa.y to arrive at the class and put the game on Ice. l out the middle name) Roth's knees pap- dorm. On week-end nights donn-parties l in one piece.

The game was marked by numerous ping. are a lot of fun. (For reservations see And to those P. L. Cltes who can't lows on both sides, due to !.he speed and I And about those tolk dances 9.'� 'have LOIS l'OLLFELDT and RUTH PFLUE· make It home for Christmas we suggest vigor of the play throughout. I been laboriously learning In class. It·s GER.) the theme-song, "111 be home for Chrlst-

reaUy fun, after we get them down pat, PROF. FRANCK can be quoted as say- mas, 1t only In my heart" with the foi-

I to be able to use them at our parties. lng he will nunk anyone who didn't vote lowtng consolation :

I There's nothing like Schottischlng for a for Roosevelt. {$64 question : Where are "It is Chrtstmas on the highway, Students Honored I good work out! the BepubUcans?) In the thronging, busy mart; (ConUnDed from Pace 1 ) I I DELORES KELLER reeeived a novel But the dearest. truest Christmas

Since a student can be Usted but once In I fonn of birth announcement In the mall Is the Christmas In the heart." this book, last year the faculty voted to , Faculty's First Christmases j _ . ______ - __ -----select members from the senior class. ! (ConUnoed from � 1) I I I t Bas.lc qualifications for membershIp are ' I cha"",te" scho' .... hlp. leed.,.hlp In extrn I ChrtstmRS Is connected with the wo,k Of

. HELEN DAVIS Coats • Suits curricular activities and potentiality for

deUvertng JX)lnsetttas and other Christ-

future usefulness to business and society. :���:.rs to the homes of hls father's for I Dresses

The first edition of WHO'S WHO CI - t G -ft I All 10 attractive for your A....\{ONG STUDENTS was printed In 1935. To Mr. Fr"anck, who spent his earliest IrIS mas 1 S i School Activities The purpose of the book I.s two-fold : Christmases tn Budapest, Hungary, Christ- I at Moderate Prices First, to serve as a means of giving na- mas Eve was the peak of the holida.y • SWEATERS I Llonal reoogn1t1on to a deserving student season . On that night the door ot their • JEWELRY I ALMA AYRES tllat is free and lmpartIal-5econd. to living room, locked for .several days, was • HANDBACS I establl.sh a reference volume of Informa- thrown open, disclosing a brightly lit • BLOUSES I INC. tlon on the great body of American stu- Christmas tree with gayly wrapped pack- 760 B'roadway

dents. A placement bureau for those ages beneath. Important was the fact I

--- I i ll.sted is also offered by WHO·S WHO, that on this nJ.ght alone was It possible ���r�= f�:m!� personnel directors of for young M1scha to stay up as late as ',:- TRICKS - J OKES - MACIC -!o j+- Victor's Market

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BRAIN CORNER GOOD "MAT" SERVED

The r .. eshmen came out wlth the high-'AT VIKING GA THERING

' Christmas Play Given By Dramatics Class

I "

,

i est number of students on the first quar- The Viking Club held its IU1nual Chrlst- The house lights were dimmed and the I ter honor roll, which is not surprising. curtain slowly rose on the dramatic class considering that It num.bers mo.re than ,

mas party Th�rsday night .. December. 7. j production. "Why the Ch1.me.s Rallg" 1 half the student body. Slx ft06h made the Jean Lovvold, president. read Luke 2, and i which was presented Tuesday, December necessary 2.25 grade average. Next in l.1J:le the Lord's Prayer was repeated In Nor- , 12. In the P. L. C. gymnasium. The play �'ere the SOPhomores with four representa- 9,'eglan. - was wlder the supervl.s.ion of Mrs. W. M.

�vll��:�=�::n��::: c:�d�a��s

t:� I The program consL')t.e�t �f �I�� I.n Nor- ] Johnson.

the Ust wegian by Mrs.-It. A. Holstad. Pre'5ldent I Margaret Ellis ably portrayed the lead-

Fol1o�lng Is the mid-semester fali term S. C. Eastvold, and Professor O. J. Stucn. , ing role of Holger. Ann.abe�

e c:�tla7� i honor roll : and two vocal solos, " 1 Hlmrnelcn, 1 : .:��: I:�:;�: �\h�

t:��'w:�::. a:d ��r- I

Ruth Bjerkan 2.81 HlmmeJen.·' and " White Christmas" by \ don Gano's role of jolly old Uncle Bertle Betty Lou Rieke 2.77 Hjordls Ragen. Christmas carols were

I �ulted him to a T.

Marjorie Edghill 2.73 sung in Norwegian by the group and I The t.ableau part of the play was per-Warren Jaech 2.69 . grunes were played for the remainder of I haps the most benuWu1 and the charec- I Walter Kunschak 2.44 . t.he evening. The serving of traditional , ters In It "'ere as follows� Vlrglnla Isvlck. I Grace Birkestol 2.42 Norwegian Yuletide· food concluded the Pat Purvis. Alice KJesbu, Janet Hauge, Elaine Smith 2 .4 1 party most pleasanUy, 'I Mrs. Margaret. Harmeling. J'tuth Johnson. Maxine Strandwold 2.40 Committees in charge of the party and Veda Jean McCoy. Alice Brudle 2.35 \\'ere a..� follows : program and games- ! " Whv the Chimes Rang" is the story Lois Penninl 2.33 Anna Anderson. Norene Skllbred. Ruth . of hOW' one little boy's love and self sacrl-

GIFTS

S�eJite" B.louses

Bags Costume Jewelry

Dickies Skirts

Dresses Rob ..

House Coah

Kay Karlson 322 So Ninth

Just Above Rialto Theater

"

Theodore Reitz 2.33 , J

.

ohn�on. Doris Jurgerson, Alice Ka.&.land' i flce won over the riches of the world and . Leta Metzger 2.3} 1 and Donna Johnson : refreshments-Cor- ca.used the heavenly Christmas chimes to Carol Elefson 2.25 mne Erickson. Ings. Johnson. Alice Brudle. ring once more In the old cathedral. OO���==�===�==�:e Myrtle Davidson. and Jocelyn Lynne : I liP. • Choir Tour

decoratlons-Jftl.n Lovvold, Carol Elefson Furnishing the ba�kground music for

and Helen Peterson: clean-up---Jean Lov- I the play wa..� a girls choir composed of BROOKDALE LUMBER CO. (Continued from Pa.c-e 1 )

Group one "America": "Ail Breathing Llfe"-J. S. Bach: "Anret Spirlts"-P

void Carol Elefson. Helen Petuson. Ce- HJordls Rogen. Miriam Hopp. F'rancelle

Cf'lI� GRrdlln. and F'enl Erickson. Schoch, Dorothy Nieman, and Betty Lou Rieke Agnes Roleder provided organ musk and also directed the choir.

:Ch����:�����: C��e �;m���F.���� Taconla Pastor to Be ,.man."_T. Teetlus Noble; ''Beautltul Speakel' at Banquet , CHOIR, GLEE RECORD Sa.i ... "-F. Mellus Christlansen : CHRISTMAS MUSIC Group two: "Gloria Pat.ri"-Palestrina ; Don your best bib and tucker and come : Not long ago, the Choir and the Glee "Arise All Things" and "A Babe is Born I out to the annual Christma.<; banquet, Club went down to KVI to record Chrlst­In Bethlehem"_G J Malmln "Sanctus" sponsored by the Student Body slated for mas music .......,J. S. Bach; "P1-ahe to the Lord" -F. ; next Tuesda.y evening. December 19. In M II CI I I · The Glee Club recorded a cantata writ· e us lr st ansen. i the Recreation room at 6:00 o·c1ock.

ten by Professor Malmtn. which will be Group three: "Today Th�r� is Rine-in,," i Miss Grace Blomquist Is to be toast- heard In one of the broadcasts during the -F. Melius Christiansen : "Only Berotk-n : mistress and the Rev. O. L. Jensen. father holidays. Several other Christmas carols Son"-N. Llndsal' Norden; "Joyful Christ- I of Ruth Jensen. will be the guest speaker were recorded......one with a. solo by Marlon �a.s Song-"-F. A. Gev�;rt ; "SUent Night"; I of the evening, I Soltman

The Lord Bless You -Peter Lutkin. I Marian Butler, general chairman. has 1 _ �_ ___ __ On Tuesday evening the Girls Chorus as assistants Shirley Morgan In charge 1 [

with sopranos and altos from the choir of the program Norma Lemke of dccora_ 11 Mrs. Frisbee's wlll present "Bethlehem," a Christmas tlons and Inga Johnson of clean-up k cnntnta by G J Malmln I Prices for the dinner \\Ul be 90 cents Ba ery

Mrs Holstad wUi accompany the choir I for day studenL� Rnd 25 cents for dorm i- : FOR FINE BAKERY PRODUCTS as chaperon I tory students I 710 So 38th at Phone OA 7591 I I:!:.===�@

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EVERY YEAR . , . . • since Its first year, Lu­theran BroLberhood has shown a steady and consistent. growth, It has always operated on the sound foundation of the time-tested legal re­serve plan, based on the American Experi­ence Table of Mortality. Lutheran Brotherhood is purely mutual - It belongs wholly to the polley owners,

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Jarifir 11lutqrran ItCnUryr

Four

Mort'

t:rsolluillg

Day;'

VOL. 22 January 18. 1945

Saga Sal{(s Business Manager Major Hauge BASIC PRINTING

I P ' I Expecled Home AMONG COURSES n rogress , MaJo, PhJllp E. Haug, J, b",k 'n th" NEXT SEMESTER

No 6

I United States and Is cOming home on

Larson Heads Work�N I I ", ave, his family learned from A. su,rprL<;e I A C'OUrse In basic printing will be arrere<!

telephone caU last Tuesday evening here next. semester under the instruction In Y t"arbook Driv� MajOr Hallgl' held the position of Dean l

of Mr Elmf"r Beard , Mr. Beard has re-

Te�t.Ilt!ve date tor the bill annual Sagll I at PLC fOT moN' Lh&l1 twenty years. He I cently eXPflndf'd hl<; shop, now housed. In

Carnival Is March 16. as announC{'d by ; ! has been ft- member of tne army ground I the Chapel basement, and has purehaaed a

ASH Prexy Agnes Mykla.nd. Further plan!> I air force since June 25. 1942 . Early In I Mlehle pres..<; The new course wtU include-

for this social highlight v.11 1 bt" made ' I Septembt"r, 1942, he lert. for oveT'!ea..s duty [ lectures, projects, and laborat.ory work, A

aft�r the election of a st,udent body ad-I

and was among the rlrst 7,000 Yank.<; to set 2-credlt subject, t.he basic printing COUl'Sf'

\'e,tislng manager Dorothy Rasmussen foot In EgyPt, This Is his rlrst visit home will be limited to six students, �1th seniors

who was elected to thts post last spring ' since he jolnt'd the armed forces, I given first preterence, then joum,

a.ll..'Un stu-

Is 1(,IH1ng '0. f'ntf"r thf' Unlversltr of I I dents. and atter that any one ('ls@ who Lo::

I ! Interested Washington Itt the end of thts sempster I INTER.COLLEG,E ., Enroll�s In the ciaQ; wUl study

It Is from the rt'turns of th(' Saga Car-nival that the buslnes.<; staff of th(' Yt'Rr- I ' DEBATE AT CPS t the poln! svstem of tyPf>, typognlphJCRJ

, I 1 display. Ph�tolithograPhY, printing pro-book f"Xp{"('l.s It$ biggest fllHlnc\al contrl- 1 butlon, I I PLC 1",1ll f"ntcr Its first Inter-collt'Klat(' cesses and otht-r phal'es of printing

EditoriRI :lIld busilH's.<; SlnHs have mrt i I debate of tht" year, with CPS II.S the l Amont( tJH' projects which the c11l8S will

several times rt'('ently with Editor EUnlC{' I opponent, Wednesday, Jan 31 . at '1 : 30 at underU!.

,

ke will be the printing ot the

Torvend to outline tht' make-up of the I Robert Larson. business manager of the Jones Hall on the CPS campus, The na- Moortn!! Ma..�t. begmnlng In the near

coming book ",·Ith Bob Larson heading I Saga, urges all studenl.s to buv IhE'ir I tiona I college question will be contented : I future

t.he ·'pocket book'· end Y!"arbooks now . Resolved "That. the Federal Government A fIPld course In bot-Rny wjJl be a sec­

On the f"dltorlal sielt'. \'ariOUS timt' I _ ___ � _

::a����hhe:\'e

I��n :e:�ko:h�� j:c:;�; Eastvold Heads

enact legislation for compulsory arb!tra.- ond 11('W �tudy avaUabl!" next semester lion of labor disput.cs.'· Dr. Alcorn wlll Instruct studentf; in the

At their Initial mt"eting at CPS, squltd recognition and classification of local memb!"rs of both schools will draw to plants, Rnd m!"dlclnal values of nearby

:;m":�d

faC�=dc

ar:;r-m�II���;:n ��e:n-. i Health (oullcil dt'tt'rrrrillt' which (!"am will support Ihe nora Field triPfl will bt! amonH the

The Snapshot Contest was set off in R I PLC PreSident S. C. Eastvold has a ' affirmative and which the negative side attractions of this course

Jlvely fashion with the preSt"nU!.tion of a I number of ch'lc duties In addition to hiS : PLC will be represented by It.<; debate Nursing students will be offered classes

skit on last s_udent body day In chapel I work as college prexy , Dr. Ea.stvold was I ;:��n�n�:r

t��efO

�:��IO�U:�a::�t �t ll'l nut-riUon, taught by Mrs. Rhoda Young.

First prize winner wlll receive his or her '" and microbiology, !!Iven by Dr, A-lcorn

Saga. free. Second prize recipient gets rE'Cently appointed a.s a membt"r of the Seattle Pacific College, Feb. 2 and 3 Other second-semester courses not gi\'_

a S2 reducUon a.nd tWn:i runner up a $ 1 : Alaska Development Committe<> for 1945 , These preliminary debates are In prep- en la.st semester but which have been

reduction by Mr. R C, Barlow, presldenl of the I aration for the Lintlela tournament oftered In prevloW! years Include crafts,

Bob Larson and his solicitors. now busy Tacoma Chamber of Commerce The I which wlll be held late In Februacy at Industrial arts. history and government

seiUng Sagll.'!; to studenL<; and faculty McMin nville Ore All the colleges ot of Washington . American government.

members. expect to have th� sales cam-I Alaska [)(>velopment Committee ha.s been I t.hf' PRclflc: Northwest will enter thts contemporary history, appreciation of

palgn finished buslnes..o:: Ichls semester If : ma�ntnilled for more t.han f1ft(,(>11 y('a�s I tournament drama, counterpoint, educauonal mea�-

\"ou hRven't already bpC>n iMer.'lewt"d. � ana has done much to create good wlU m ' urements. church history , tine ails, ethics,

Bob Is hot on your 'trail to the tune of Ala..<;ka for Tacoma and It.. .. indUstries. Dr I Vikin.O'8 HOllorell solid geometry. contemporary literature

$320 � Shakespeare, t.he family, social psychol -_____

Eastvoid expee,ts to make a visit to Alaska

I A 1 Sen ior Progranl ogy. trigonometry, analytics. world of somettrne dunng 1945 to reprCSf'nt the music. and P E, methods , 112

Skeleton Found College and the Chamber ot Commerce : ··A Tribute to the Fighting Vlklnt(l'I

I PLC' CI :l!'; a member of thL<; committee I was presentt'<i by tht' seniors on Wednes-11 S oset day, JanuRry 10, 1945, In the- college gym ? ? ? Being chairman of the Tacoma Health : The progra.m was dedicated to Pa.cHlc A recent tour of thE' Blolog;.· Labora- i Council also helps to keep PLC·s prexy I Lutheran College fighting men who would Who wIH be- ASB Business Manager

tory dl.<;("losed that ev!"n PLC has IL� own 1 bUS)'.. TIle Council ts interested In maln- , have graduated this year next semester? Who wUJ be freshman

f�IlY skeleton. The gentlemen In Ques- , taJnmg good health conditions In the i A girl acrobat and two small boy soloists representative? Everybody's asking. and UOn was enrolled-or at least Added to City of Tacoma. I' ",'ere outstanding a.mong the outside tal - nobody knows our equipment-last fall Dr, East\'old has been appointed as on!" ent Student offerings Included vocal

Heading the formidable ltst or new of four members of a legislative commit- I solos by Emma Thoren and HJOn:ils Rogen . Come, show your school spirit,"

equipment In the lab Is a kymo(Taph, tet' which Is prest'nUng a proposed en- I and two accordlan selections by Lorene urges President MykJand "Begin t'lr-which L� used for tracing cun es of pres- abhng act to the Washington State Legis- Garges Wilson Norma Lemke played as culating your petitions now " sure Next L<; a ct'ntrtfuKe, used for sepa- laturt" nov. In session This but is being I plano numbers the theme songs ot the rating materials of dltterenl denslt) presented for tn'" pUrpD5e ot getting ce- I Army Nay) Marines and Coastguacd

whirled down the corpuscles going to the t IIc schools to receive religious Instruction ot Ceremonies RECOVERING AT' HOME such as blood solutions The solution is lief time for children attending the pub- Mildred Brodland Martin was M1streSS j ASH VICE-PRESIDENT

bottom Thump thump thump went my I - �----__ _ _ ______ _ Betty Christenson JWllor in the- college h,art but and ou' oomes , '�"'_ P. L. C. HERO RECUPERATING of edu,""on who h .. be<n 'n the hoop''''' set. For recording blood pressure. there " a •• h' .... o_n.m ... ' < you pconoun", AT FORT HOSPITAL

I for one and a halt months, retW'lled. to her home In Tacoma, January 9. She wUl

it) and a recordtng tambOur for record- remain at home until fully recovered log muscle movements and heart beats. Pfc. Marvtn Shaw , ex '43, tonner A:;- assault troups who landed at Anzio, In I from her appendectomy. She w1&hes to An electric plate has been purchased tor soclate Editor of the M, M., who in two ItaJy. : express her appreciation and gratltutde use in bacteriology. Other new gadgets years in the !U"ttl.y has seen front line ac­Include a hemoctOblnomeur, for measur- Uon In North Africa, Italy, and Southern 1ng the amount ot hemoglobin In the France, is now recuperating at the Mad.1-blood: a pneumO(l'apb. for recon:ilng gan Hospital at Camp Murray (Ft, Lew). movementf; at the chest In breathing ; a SeveraJ students and also several faculty haemacytomel.er, to determine the amount members have visited him dunng the of corpuscles In a given quantity of short time tha.t he has been bact. here on blood; and an lruhactortDDL In case you the coast. still don't know what It's all about we Man entered the service two years ago .suggest you consult Mr. Webster or Dr · l in February with ten other PLC anny Alcorn. reservists but was separated trom the rest

The lab also has I\umerous new _taw" ot the group shortly aItec their InducUon dlde5, and a model of a human eft' and i and never has met any of the members of e&I'. I h1s group since. Following hIs basic train-

The department is in need of a pres- ' ing In the United States, he experienced sure cooker, and anybody who knows J h1s first action with the lnIt1a.l Invasion where one can be obtained is asked to ) (orees In North Africa. Alter the batUe report to Dr. Alcorn. J ot N. Africa Marv went with the ttnt

In Italy Marv was wounded seriously to the many friends and students at PLC twice. The third time he was wounded who remembered her during this Ulness. was In France where as he was walking down a street to try to find someth1ng� to eat nrtlllery tram the enemy hit close by and flew In ali directions. It was aIter fUllling events this experience that Man was Shipped to Monday, January 22, to Tbanday, Janu-Italy and then by boat to the U. S. ary Z5: Semester ExamInations.

After being stationed in a hospital In Friday, January U, and Monday. January

N. Carolina he was flown to Spokane ' 29 : ReglBtraUon . where he stayed for a short time before Friday, February 2: ABB-sponsored. mOYie Christmas In Baxter Hospital prevtOWl to at college : THE PLAINSMAN. starring

being transferred to Madigan General ' Gael' Cooper and Jean Arthur. Hospital a short time ago. : Friday, February 9: Third Lyceum Con-

Marv has many expenences to tell, some I cert, National Operatic Quartet_

of which are about h1a stay in eight dlt- Saturday, Febnaa.ry 10, and 8U1day. Feb_ ferent hospitaLs. At present Man is rest- I ru&r}' n: LSA Conference, More de-

IContinued on pace 4) tails later,

1

.. .... ... .... . .

at4r stonrittg Slast PabUIbed e'NI'7 two ....eeb durtDc the .eboQI, rear by atudeIlt. of Pa.cU\c: 1Alt.b.era.n 00Ilect:.

01't\ce: Rl"Oal 130 Telephone: OR.a.n1\e .11

sut:.cripUoo prio&---I.IJ)O per Year Kntered. .. aeeood. elaas matter, OCtober 2, 1". M t.bt PM&

January lit I�!i

With the __ Clites in Service The Illost recent vl51t to Our campus by I reporter and yell l�aMr at PLC ror two

Ollt' of our boys In the service was that }'ea..n prior to hl.S tnllstm�nt, Addre&!l' III

. of \'a.le Bw-,.et'. ex ',... VAle is with Uw �nt. w., M.

otnoe at. Pa:rt1&nd. W� und�r the Ao\ of Army AII' Corps ground CN!'..... and ha.s ARM lie Allan L Oy�rland, ex '43 � S. 1m. ' been In Texa.� for some time. Address: special ..... rlter for M. M . ..... hUe here, hl\..'i

EDITOIUAL STAFF P.,t Vale Burger A S. N. , 39216827. 2527 been rt'Comm�nded for two air medal�,

'OO-EDITOIUJ . . .. .. . . . _. ANITA STUItN, ALICE B&UDlI: ! Bast' Unit, Sect ··C·' South Plain, Army and his twin motored bomber group tanl.

6...aIlodate Editol" Theod.Of"e Relta 1 Air Field, Lubbt'Clt. Texa.� . ed the coveted Presidential Citation for

Sports Reporter Walt KW1SChait I PI."C's latest COni rlbutlon to the army Its work agsmst the Nlppons. Allan 00-�rs: Vlrg1n1a una, Ds.phne Hellman, Helen Ander&On, A.rdy5 Bredvold. Telma. wa. .. In the person or RWl8e1l Murray. served his 20th birthday recently In tht'

Metzser, Beryl Berp.n. Anita Roth, Ruth Johnson.. Lou.il!le ToW�ldt. member of the boys' quartet IUld choir vicinity of Leyte. where he � a radio man

Adv1aer' Mr8 Ruth P"'ranck I until his Induction al Ft. Lewis on Janu- , and gunner on his craft. Address : Allan

I ary 5_ Russ started his college education I OverliUld ARM, 3/ C, Squadron VPB 611

BUSINESS STAFJ1' BUSINESS MANAGER

I by at.tendlng Ia.'!t yeRr's summer session c 0 F.P.O., San Francisco, CRlifornJa.

.DOKOTBY NIEMAN here. He t<; now In AlltbiUlla In t.he In- i�ew address of Ralph 1.larlow ScbUlios.

AdveTU&1ng" Manaaer Cb-culatJon

Martan Butler 1 fRntry . Roy Lanon. son of ReV Larson. ex ·40, former M. M. Columnist, is Y 3 C Inga JobMOll instructor In Swedish here, left Sunda}' R S. PSNY, Bremerton, Washington

COrinne Er1c.k.son morning for San Diego where he will re- FlI,ht Orricer Jack B. Wall, '40, former

Cecelia Oardlln celvf' his " boot" trRining In the na\'y ; feature writer tor M. M .. of Lhe Air Trnnl" Roy enlist«! and left one dRY before his port Command. is at present stationed III

A.nna.bell� Blrkestol 18th blrthda}'. Star number 354. soon to Assam. Indla_ In a letter to Prot. 0 Orace Bl.rt.estol be

.RddE"d to our school sen'ice rlRg, wUI J Stuen, Jack told of pA.SSlng over JertlSfl.

8en1cemen's CtreuJa.Uon SOlicitors : :-.ta..rgi.e Carbon, Qra.ce Gulhaug.en, Rumohr Oulhaugen. Jocelyn Lynne. designate earl Fynboe. H S . '44 Karl IS I{"m, thE" Red Se

a. the Jordfln River. IUld

Ruth BJerkan, and Sylvlll Blomlle. e ntering the navy In :loom R Wl"pk 'I many other Biblica.l sPOts. Oll hL<; trip

Advi&eT O. J . St.uen A number Of former st.udents and grad- from India Jack is now flying tht'

uates now In the Rrmed for� were prl\'- I ·'Hump"· the Himalaya mOU;IlLRins, thl'

ECHOES FROM OVER THE DESK

Ileged to spend the ChrL�tmas Holiday al l peaks of which Rre some six miles high t.heir homes_ Among them were 1\Ian AddrNiS F 0 J B, Wall I T-2243181 1333 Shaw. Bill Ram.ostad, and ;\1a.rk Slu�n. I AAF BU ICO-ATC . APO 629, c ia Poot­

New nddrE"ss of 1\Iaf'('us R. SlUf'n, '43, Los i masler New York, N , Y 604 N 14th, Mllw(lukf't' 3. Wisconsin. HIS The latest address of Ensl,n 1-:, I\.rthur sister. ;\Iary EHzab

.

rlh Stu�n, ·43, is sta - I Larson., ,

.

x '43. former footbR!t and bi\Sket­tloned with the "Waves·' In San Diego. ball star is SCTC, Roosevelt Ba.c;e, Ter-

Prilltt'd bt-Iow an' excerpts from a letter received from John flagllen. la.<;t yeRr·s CallfornlR Addl"('ss : Mary E. Stuen. S minal L�Jand> San Pedro. California, M M. f'ditof. now attending MIdland College in Fremon t , Nebraska . John WR)1; active 1 t· S� , S ' . Adm lwd Mil COmnulIld

1Il numeroul' .�tud ... nt aHain; the two year.;. hE" attended hert' USNR Repair Ba.'!e. Wave Barrack.. .. C·

I Se,\Jfrrd Lee Hand�, '26, is with t.he U S

'· My Interest In the college I am now attending IS nat ural and so wll\ be the San Die-go. Calltorni fl. · 1 abef')'; III California. Address · A. L

1e\'otlon t gin' to it But, it doesn't o\'crshadow my inlt'rest Rild devotion for P. L. C. Mandl' M. M_ 2/e Sfl.tt 79. Co. C. Plat 5.

My days at PLC I count among my haPPIPSI ann mo. .. , productl\'E" In It'adl'rship and Gus :\ndf'rson, ex ·n, WR" on thE" cam- Camp Parks, Shoelllllker. CRUfomla.,

pus se\'(�ral tlm�s during the last three I The M_ M. rt'Celves man I ' "ducation. days beforE" Christmas vRca tlon. H.e WIlS y etters trom

" Then the organizations! "Oh. activll} " · · Evan Carlson used to shout. AnybOdy hom(' on furlough from Florida before ' our boys In the service In aU parts of tht'

With a head securely fRstem"d to hl!< !<houlders had a chance for a responsible po..<;ltlon. I World, who appreciate their caples of our being trnnsf{'rr{'d Gus L<; now In Kan.<;as .

Somt' fRlled to make their offin's ImportA.nt and they IRgged behind. Those who receiving RddltlollRI flying InstrUCtion .. I

schoo) paper A recent thank-you lettt'r

wanted. ex])erif'nce In the student court of human relations forged ahead The way Address : Ensign Ous AnderMn B 0 Z camE" from Cpt Robert C. Fornes�,

to leadership ..... RS (-a.'iY for lhose who mRde It E"asy. Room B-130. Naval Air Slatlon: H�tchln-39306 1 1 5 , 490th Bomb Sg. , M I AAF, APO

·Warning SP'('dal17..c your activltips according to interest.<; Rnd lhen reRlly pitch son. Kansas. 218, c o P M_ New York, N. Y. Cpl. For-

OoI1·t t.r)' U"I do eVf'rything. I ness, ex ·4!. is with the Army Air Corp

' My IdeRI for .�tudent activities for a small college would be al' follows ChUl'k Bllllnrs1ey, H, S, ex '44. attended In Burma. A former sports editor ot the

1 Ever)' member of tile A,S_B !!lfonned and !Ilh'rt>.�!f'd in sc hool affairs-all-lile Christmns banquet here on Dec. 19· 1 M_ M_ who enjoys his current. COpl(,5.

collegt' ChUCk .

. who IS now In the army all' corp, I which cBt.eh up with him occa.<;lonally, b;

2. EVNY mf'mber of th{' Studt'l1t Body ftcth'f'l.v f'ngRg('d in at least olle s�ial ;.<1$ high school s�.

udf'nt body president Fales Martin, ·40. Fales writes "I Just

organilRtioll or club and in not more than three or fOUl" 'Prnternities. sororities. ast year Address . Charles Billingsley, wanted you to know that the gOOd k

class organizRtions, should not be included 1Il .�pl'cial activity Debate. Saga stA.ff, A C C W Bill, ec .. L., 3013. A. A F B. U. I

of yourselves and staffs Is appree::d Mooring Ma$' st.aff. rf'l\gious organization .. �, drama club. alhl('tic clubs. should be

Deming, New Mexico. : by all of us over here " He Is with the

Included II) sJM!('laJ urganizatlOns_ A point system could be ..... orkl"d out to lu-nit ,drl':ld}' overworked lead('r.; and ('ncoura.gf' inactl\'t' st.udf'ntl' to partlclpatt' l!\ spl'cla)

clubs and projects. 3 Rt'llgious emphasis promott'd by rellgiou." orgalllzRtions. .. Schola..<;tlC emphasis promoted by honorary societlf'S

Gt'orlt' Thorlrlfson, famolL<; foot.bRII : forces on the Western Front In Europe, pJuyt'r from pre· war dRyS, home on leRve 1 Rob("rt ;\l. ;\fartln, '36, former grid stur Irom overseas dUly. vlsHed the campus l and sports writer of M. M. and brother Ia. .. t ..... et'k George �as bet'n stnt.!oned on I ot Fales. is also overseas. Address; Pfc the .o\dnllrRlty Is. III the South PaClfic' l Robert M. Martin Co. F R 8 R Repl Pool

"With all my bragging about Midland I forgot to menlion that t made so many He IS a brother of Lillian Thorlelfson APO.

153 I P t te . .

favorable comment.<; on PLC thil' year that some Midlandit4'S were r�Rdy to ship me a student here now Address Georg� York ' c o os mas r, New York.. New

back to the land I IO\'e It ..... as f'RSy for me to SRY. ·· We USt'(i to do this WRy back Thorleifson Csp ' A I , Navy 3205. Welfare I FJ-ed at PLC ." and Re<" _ (' 0 Fleet Post OffiCe", San Fran- I .

M. Kro�l'er, B. A. '41, is now a

··So-<lon't E"ver I{'l your IX'\) and enthlL�lasm for th€' Alma Ma(.('r die down cL-<co. California corporal at Camp Ritchie, Maryland. Ad-

·· May God',� prt'�ncl' ('\','r abid{' with you ' New address of Ted Baird, ex '42 is Pfc. =:W6CPI

� �ederlCk Martin .Krueger,

Sincerely, I A Ted Baird, 39192089, Ser. Plat. �po 72, Camp �IChl/t�:ryl��' Company 0.,

John · i c o P. M., San Francisco. I Stan GlIJr, ex ·44, who Is with the

ft wUl be a qUiet week-t'nd. as with forboding thought.s we look ahead to next 1I'f'ek-ExRI1l Wee k !

G�r,e Fallstrom, ex '42. fOrmer grid star, still looked like the aMwer to Coe.ch merchant marine also had Rn opportunity ' Olson 's wishfuJ thJnldng, ' visited school to visit the campus shortly before Christ- . Iast week. He has been stationed. with

a nd puzzled expre.s."ilons which are replacing former carefree, happy-go-lucky attitudes :��·c�:���. ����u���:� -:;:,���� the army's Signal Corps. work.lng with

The last mInute library rush is on again with Russian LIt. bOOks at a. premium nla Radar In Panama fOr nearly three years,

Procra,�tinatlor. has at last caught up with us, a.� is easily .�cen by the perplexed

And It's like pulling teeth to borrow notes from that clas.<; you skipped, Address : CpJ. George FaILstrom 19075340

Evan J. Carl.oson, ex '42, has been gradu- 0 516th S A W Regt APO 828 ' , But the most s)mpath} should go to the freshnlen who have never befOre '!X- ' ated from Harvard University with an en- New Orleans La · , clo p, M

perlenced that Inqulsltlous InStitution-the two-hour eXRn1 All we can say trash is ' I I ' . that we've never lost a freshman yet. I S gn's commls..<;lon In the Navy Re6en'e New address of Rod�riclr. Fr&IieT, ex '42. , Supply Corps. He will continue his studies 1 fonner stUdent of PLHS, 18 Private IIC

Ahoy all camera·flends ! Ta..ke your horror boxes in hand and cat.r.h the un· suspecting student at an opportune moment, Watch for the unusua.l ; such as--­Muscles reporting on time for his first-period class, or Joe discovering that somebody I�ft him som� gas In his CIMSY chassy.

80 glamour gal&-keep those shining locks curled these sunny days (we ca.n dream, can't We?) and ha.ve your toothpaste smile ready to blind at a second's nottce Fear not the fanatical student who carrie.! a title black box under his ann. Ask the man who owna one, be a model. and you wW enjoy being the subject of much (favor. able) comment when the Sagas are distributed..

And remember, camera fans, keep those shutters clicking; take pictures the Reitz way. and you. too, may win a Saga,

' untU next July when he expecL<; to re- Roderick FrA.Ser. Marine Det., Box 8, U. eelve his Junior grade commission and I S. S. Idaho. c/o Fleet Post Office San be assigned for duty, Evan was a M.'" M. Francisco, California.

.

PARKLAND HARDWARE -Bicycles-

Repair - Parts Painting

'12 Block East of College

. ' .� -� . \.. ('

January 18. 1�5 PAOS nIR.a

Cross-Town �val ' ,Cllte ,COSSieSIfcTION KAMPU,S �O''AA'DT1t.T.GS Downs GladIators A I '.J.YlDll V" Lest this be labelled "Pet Peeve-:;" right JanuarY , 12-The Gladiators had their I off tht' bat. bt' as.<;ured that t hat Isn ·t the . Christma.s IS over for most of U. ... --but

l thl ... week L ... GRACE OULHAUQF.N·S

vlcwr)' strIng stopped at tour games as idea. • not fnr ED BERNDT, Tuesday ·fore last litlle pink ··Oluly Bear."' th� lost a heanbreaker to their cross- i But when some of the gals like Vedis ! A.L KUHN made {I')j an Impressive presen- With exam week coming up 'III'e h�r to·grn Mval . CPS, by a score of 4a to 41 HUSt"boe or M yrtle Da\'idson lead In cla...:,s � taUon of that timely book resurrected from strnins of songs like theS(' floating arowld

The gllITle was a thrill prodUcer all t he ext'rci�s they don ·t. mean PERhaps After I the Student Bod)' OHlce. ··The Miln I Old Main: ., >liay right up to the rinal whistle with a workout from one of them. evervone is I That Rum Made " It·s a tos .... -up whose I ··Can·l Oet Examinations orr My Mind both teams emplo)ing a fast and vicious left wht"ezlng like oil-burning ML"I(O�hOnes I face was the redder-Ed's or · 'RUM·· I · ·1 Didn't Sleep a Wink Last Night '·

brand Of.

ball. The winners held a slight Could bt> we·re bt'lnl'j; trnhH'd for Junior I GULHAUGEN'S ·Scstterbra.ln ·· lead during most of the game, The Lutt's COmmando..... I No�' that the holidays ' art' OVN for a ______ _ t.ept edging up on the CPS five. and All those conscientious gals who·\,e �·hile. 110'(" hear a new theme-song In the Those Test Week Blues st"Veral times were able to tie the scorc. found that the routine of colle!!:£" life : dining hall ··Pas$ the Biscult.. ... Mira.udy.- , By Ruth Johnson but were neyer able to gain and hold til(' boosts their tormage have resumed their I bUl not to me , , " Is the favorite among tn the dorm on test-week evenhlgs lead. PLC's hopes for victory were dealt ('xt'rcises in the halls atter study hours. l tho.� dietln� doBs In the dorm who In - Sat the little lowly f"reshman ; !I. se·,.er£" blow when several of the start- That·� not all E\'en more drastic meas- dulged too Irf'ely In holiday fcasting , i Heard the mumbling of the student.<; mg {h·e were retired on toul� with con- ure:; han' been taken Diet! (LE"av!' ott I

BERYL BERGAN. freshman In the Heard the groaning of the donnltes s:derable playing time remaining. A total the ,·t ' · If you like ) . It·s really fun W Colleg(" of Liberal Arts, has left P L. C Sounds of sighJng. words of worry of 41 personal fouls were made by memo dean up on those extra deserts that float . to join tl"le Cadet NuI"Sf' Corps. She will "Too mUch '.IUlzzes. "· sald the Soph'mort' bel".'; of both teams during Lht" game around as a result ' train at the S�edlsh Hospital in SeattlE> ··You aren't klddln· . .. said the Junior ", .. hkh shows the speed and vigor of the It may Qe early for spring housec lean- Saw the ghost of Old Report Onrd play ROY BOWS TO LVTES In!: .. but eager PL.C.ltes really raised the I Flitting through her thoughts that ev('nin!!: Nordent; of PLC took scoring honors dust In moving the Student Body Office I With the grade marks of the teachers

With Il total of 17 points. The game BY SCORE 40-39 . last Wednesday Even Hortense I JOE i Haunting all her mind and mem'ry rnarkt'd the last appearance of Ro�· Lar- January S-Eklng out a 22 to 20 de- HEUCHERT·S 1920 Forni putted eagerly I And she sang the sollg of student.. .. : .. on before his entering the Navy cision over the Roy High School Quintet along with the rest, Sang the song experience taught· her The U'arn was given a lot of good sup- thl' Lute5- chalked up their third victory A cute lIt.tle curly-haired blonde has I ··LeArn the lesson. little mem'ry port by a large group of student. ... who in a row Thl' halft ime score was 11 to 9 moved Into Room 435 In the Girls· Dorm Little wandrlng, flitting mem·ry made tht' cross- tO"ll,n trip to CPS in RO\'·.� favor In a fourth quarter rnlly Sht' halls from Portland but a.o; ret is

Llttlf' weary. cart'-worn mem 'ry Thf' df' if'at was thl' first one of the It'd by Rosin. who scored Sl.'vt'll poin ts in undecided A$ to hf'T COUfS!' A tip 10 Ihe I Stow away those facti> and figures ..... ·8.50n [or the Luthefans that time. UH' Lutes finally got lnto the boys: Her Ilame IS Fay Elda Dell For Ert' upon m�' bed I lay me PLC l U I 1 "8f CPS h,"ad "·jth less than two mlnute$ re- the rt'al low-down, boys consult ·DAPH · Erf' In sleep r clO& �lY eyelids Rediske F ' 6 1 Addison maininJ.t After getting t.he lead the win- HELLMAN

Nordeng . 1 7 1 F 1 5 1 Brown , ner.� successfully frozt' t he ball untll the i Idf'a for makinK a quick fortune · Se ll r----------� KWL<;('hak C ' 1 3 1 OqUisl I game ended ready-made black coffee to ··mldnight - ,' Bnunmf'f ' 6 . G . 1 1 ' Campbell PLC 1 22 1 ( 20 ) Roy oilers" In the dorm durinJ.t exam week I BERGE"S Larson , 7 ' G Rdd I Norden� , 2 . F . 2 ) Absten The fudgl' kitchen could tell a lot ..

Substitutes ' PLC-Logsdon. Folsom · Z ' . Rediskf" . Z , F Michelson about dormlt� and tht'ir culinary art.�. , I Berndt ' 2 1 . Rosin , 7 ' . Pihl CPS-HentZ('

Kunschak G ' 3 ' Gerrltz but the prize goes to TELMA and LETA Wllere the 1 4 • . Hogatt ' 5 1 . Arnus . 3 1 . Holm. Minf'l· Brammt'r ' 5 1 G 1 3 ) Bunan METZGER. Monday they again showed

EI' M tl. Carsten Morrl... Utrson 1 2 ). G Nixon their talent.<; In baking a birthday cake I Ite eet SUbslituU's ' PLC-Logsdon. &rndt. Fol- for PAUL ARLTON, They·d certainly I I To Eat

LUTHERAN HOOPlUEN CONQUER CREAMERS

January 9-Led by Earl Nordeng who scored 1 5 IXllnts. the PLC basketball team scored jt.� fourth win of the M'ason as it f'dged Ollt lhe Proctor Street Crf'llmcrs of Tacoma, 40 to 39 The game was a rret' $corlng affair all the way, with neither team able to build up a sate lead :

.�om . 4 1 , Pih! . Rosin ' 7 1 Jaeck Roy- lOok good in somebody·!! kitchen. wouldn't I Moort' ' 3 1 , Harkness ' 3 ) , Hug)o(ler I Z I they bOys l � 1 ; Schwarz ' 4 1 . I n the girls' dorm the main attraction I Parkland. Washington

'�------------ ';' , I TI1I' next Issue of the Mooring Mast i TRICKS _ JOKES - MACIC ' ::=-===-"':'=::=-��T \\·111 be put out by the Alumni I I I ---; I C .. 'um., · Tu"d .. - S • .,..ntln., Victor's Market I THE NEWEST LATEST I Neal E Thorsen I I . GROCERIE • • MEATS ·

RECORDS 1 ' I COLD STORAGE LOCKERS 9Z8", Broadway MAiD 4361 0 8538 I TE:dB:=NM�:;IC 1" 1 .1.

BROOKDALE R.

1 121-23 Broadway Books for Any Occasion I ., SHARMAN BOOKSTORE r RANWELL'S 934 P",f" A"enu. :

at any time. The Lutes were forct'd to come from behind In gaining the win, • doing so In the lru;t few minutes of play

t-?�E Op.n '"'n,n" ,," 9 D m

, ���TR�N B;d2� ; ..... ���,;;:i;;;· ... 1·1: " fila Crook..� of the Crl'amers took individual

scoring honors with 18 pomt. .. PLC 1 40 1

Logsdon Gallo

F F

(391 Crea.mers

I S ) Hoff 1 18) Crook.. ..

PIPER FU NERAL HOME "'-P' Senotee, and F1no F ....

5458 SO. PUO!:T BOUND 915 Oommerce MA. 9'702 I OAr. ....

'" i!l l !! ::dt ( Z I � (�� 1 �o!:�:� ! �1!;�;;Q;::;

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ITY�:;;;

K;;N:;;I;:;TT:;:;;

I;:;N;;c;:;;co;;::;:;'=-l" PihJ 1 2 1 G ( 2 1 Granlund I " ,

Substitutes : PLC-Redlske , 2 ) , Folsom . i n Specialized Auto Repairing

BROADWAY MOTOR CO,

Norder.g 1 15 1 . Kunschak I Z I . Larson ( 6 1 , : 934 COM:MERCE � Standardi .. ed Prices Brammer • 7 1 . Rosin 1 4 ) Creamers- I I �:�I��:::��:�:�� :.";:::::::::::�!!:-::�:Ij �-=

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928 Pacific Avenue 813 :=�,:VE. � I .. __

Broadway at 1 3 th f!t:::;::::::::Ta::'::;o::m::'=2':::::;W::03h1n=::g:::to:::n:::::;::::;'9� � .... l:

., ::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ;:::::::::::::::::;;:� i �;:;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;;;:;;:;:;:;:�;:;;:;:;:;:;;:;;;:� ., ':' :':::::::!!f \ l ;-DINNERS & STEAKS FOUNTAIN SERVICE

BLUE RUSTIC Mountain Highway

Lundberg Drug naG PACIPIC AVE..

PHONE OR. 8518 .

S E L D E N ' S First in Floor Coverinp

(x}oASIONAL P'URNlTUR.B

ALL THE GOODNESS

THE NAME I MPLI ES

HOMOGEN I Z ED

I i � j _os_ � -1.-_______ --+ j"=��"�,,=,,===,,======10 I.!ooo=========�======;:,

�.��.� ..... ____ � _i .... _!l: . • �� ... .. , ....... , ... _._. ____ � __ _ ... _.

. - - .

,. - -'. ,- ... . . .... ' ....;.. . ... .. -- ;-......

P AClPlC L UTHERAl'rf CX>L.Ll!;.U E

A WS ENTERTAINS GI's ON SKA TES

Sonl( Title" Camp ... SlY." TIlrt'(' O'Clock in tht> Morning-studying

The A,W S Ice "kaUng patty Prlda.y o�O�::R.B:ULJfUl Doll-after U\klng (')tN­night.. January 12. a:� rumor has It. ItmlJt>r- elsE's In glrl'� donn t"d up a lot of sluggi.�h mu.scl� around : Who HIE'\\' Out the Flumt'--hghts out the CamplL'i Pt>rhaps tho� fancy Rcro- I SIE"t'py , Lflgoon-Comp cia!>. ... batlcs which usually end bottorn. ... down 1 1rre!'llsi'lbll" You---.!'t'oond helpings at dln-:'��g g�

aro;

Ol���:t

I��:n�;IZ��Rn tht' \\·tn, 1 W�

e�OUJ(1 MRkt' Such SE'lI.utlful Muslc-

The U-drln' truck WAS At tht> ClUnpu� j P L C choir at 9 . 15 P. M. to take tht> .c;t.udellls to the DRrk Eyr.!o-ORphIlt' Heilman Lakewood IcE" Arena Anotht'f truck was Togt"lher-A!l And Mlm Ilt C.P.S to take thQ<;t' who wanu>d \Q go Six l....f>s.'iOns From Mad!lm La.FRnt�.·xt'r-skating after thf' basketball game clses In glrl"s dorm

During intermbslon tht' skaters fortl- Grl."{'n EYE's-Freshmf'n f1f'd them:;elves with hot chocolate and I Always-P L. C hamburgers At 12 00 thf' ... IRst spins DOIl"t Cry-report cards Ilround the rink Wf'ff' taken to the music I So Many Mf'mories--inltlatlon of · ·Homf' SWf't"t Homt'· Rnd thl' Alma I PleaS(' Be Kind-waiting for mall at P 0 MAter

Ml:SIC NOTES OF ISTEREST

I Gue.. .... ., I"ll Ha\'(' to Dream tht' Rf'st ­man shortagt'

Once 1Il II WhUt'-soldler part}"

WHO'S WHO

LIlt' of the- party t:rtl!rvesoent tllke alka-sf'lt.zer' Elegant speaker

.'ru!'tntes profs Out.. .. tandlng athlt'te Love-I)" halr Sings like Frankie Oh. that harmony! )Iastt'rs a Prellch horn

Hubbllng WIth laughter Attractive Re-vE'1s In good food Baby blue eyes

Nice-Energy plus Willing worker Tidy housekeeper Only girl In physics class Scat. dresser

/'1 -.

JanUlU')' 1&, I� MAIlV SHAW

tContinaed' 'ram pap I ) Ing M) that hLs elbow. which had shrapnel

. In It. and hLs leg. which 1.5 !tlll 'Nu.k from one of hL1 InJur1e5, wiU heal. He expt'Ct� ; too be dl5cha.r&ed 10 3 or 4, months Marv tnrorm� your reporter thAt h .. , hopes to cont1nu� the second half of hl� sophomore year at PLC next fall. Marv � ovm story about h.l$ experiences durtnl-! two years In th� anny will appear In th,· I near fUlUTe _____ _

L. S. A. The local L.S.A. council �1l1 bt> hu-t.,

to Lhe L.S .A Regional Conference, St�t\lf day and Sunday. Peb. 11. 18 DtoIt'1Jall" from the Central W·ashlngton ColleR"t' of

, Education at Ellensburg. and from tilt" University of Washington will bt> pre..wnt

... NDERSON GROCERY Parkland. Wuh. OR. ....

SCHOOL 8UPP'LD1B aDd ROME REMEDIa

The mUSIC df'"partment has many activ- I How Man�' TImes do I HavE' to Tell YOII?­lUes In tht' offing fOf next Sl'mf'stt'r The teachers I Choir has planned a weE'k-E'nd trek and GII·t' Mt' R Sflllor-Evelrn Pall]son-Rnd will appear at SMIllie and Port L.ewL., A olh .. r� eltllpel Qllotes

·An absentee God Is no Ood at all ·· ; .!.;:. :::=:::::::::::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.. tour 1s also being cons.1derNl for thl:' In thf' Hush of Ihe Night-study hours Orchestra thIS Spring Nt'w music for It Could Happen tt.. YOU-I\ da\.t' the Girls· GleE' Club ha.� arriv('d Rlld Th�' Trolley Song--Spanr.wa�· bU6 interesting program IS being 8.ITangNl How Mllny HparLo; HRvt' You Broken?-

··God never answers pretenders · -Pres. S. C Eastvold

·"Th� pt'ople today art' satisfied with thE' sill of mediocrity ··

BROOKDAU LUMBn CO. Mount&1n Hllhwa;r

BROOKDALE. WASH. "'------------_w SI:��do�t'�a

l�o Your Eres-boy .s dorm itY.�

\'t' is the very essence of Chrl.'iUan-

COLLEGE HAI RCUTS Chanj.!t' of Heart-Walt Logsdon Th .. bt'st that we can achieve Is �:::::::=:::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::! .. PARKLAND BARBER

TherE'll Be Some Chnnges Made-P L. C Christltkent'ss. and to that end we must carpenters strive · C. R. MARSH : You Can·t Take That Awtl.\' From Me� -Marlon Sollman. Pres .. A.W.s last mmute wmks in the morning h th :'============:::. Slightly In<;trumental-P L. C. orChestra ) tr����a�;::n�

·�a:�

h��:

r��et.o�::� rlgh: -.-.. Dolores-Keller ) to live.·· . =-1 Tv.o In Lov!'-Thelma and Ray ··Christlanlty L-; t.he only safeguard to

BERGLAND HARDWAR E CO. I Don t Want to Set th .. World on ,,'re- the blessings thRt we are enjoying 1n our te6I PAOlPlD

�aln" Smith S halr democrRcy ·· r I I Be Seeing You-And\ S -Re\". Samuel Lentz. OR. ..,. I Ho'>" Sweet You Are-week-end-; Pastor of PeRce Lutheran Church.

RAU'S CHICKEN DINNER

INN OKCIlABD HILL

;============:! M, Shining Hour-a good gradt' on a I Tacoma Washington the-me

I Pennies Prom Heaven- money from hom!' [=---'----------'" �"'::::::==:::==:::====::::<€ ....... .- wan' ...... _ . I Mrs, Frisbies : c. FR1'D CHRISTENSEN j CORRECTION STOP AT I STATIOIND Robert Urson was omltteo from tht' Bakery

� .... l ' ],. " ! (Rooenburp) honoc col( which w", "'in ted In th, I,,, FOR FINE MIElty PKODUCTS _�Ir I I '-2)'_ . I

913 Pacif1c Ave. DR.. ..... l.�su!' His avefRge was :l.31 I "' : ;'=:::::::::::::::===:::::::::=�-------------1' 7l() So 38th St. Phone OA 7591 � i JOHNSON & ANDERSON I for Delicioul Hamburren I

I 0-akflJ I JUmG.:;:��.ko' I GROCERIES flOUR

On the Mountain H i ghway

H ... Y GR ... IN ETC.

Parkland, Wash at t 9"J1 a:=�� I � 9th and Pactfic i r ANDERSON LUMBER COMPANY ii , r- SK ... TE ... T I 9802 PAC I F I C AVENUE THE ROLLER BOWL I

GRanite 7 3 1 1 I SOUTH TACOMA WAY 1 FM ;;:::::::::::::;;:::::::::::::;;:::::::::::::;;:::::::::::::;;:::::::::::::;;:::::::::::::�� I ;=:, ========================�

Girls' Sport Clothes Have Your Portrait Made the i M ... KE GOOD SCHOOL GARM ENTS Modern Way

See Them AT MODERNE PORTRAIT STUDIO

Washington Sports Shop 9 1 8 PAC I F I C AVENUE 9TH and PAC I F I C AVE

P�ON E M .... 5438

EVERY YEAR _ . _ since Its tirst year, Lu­theran Brotherhood ha.s shown a steady and coos1stent growth. It has Qlwaya operated. on the sound toundation ot the time-tested legal re­serve plan. based on the American Experi­ence Table at Mortallty. Lutheran Brotherhood Is purely mutual - 1t belongs wholly" to the pollcy owners.

LUTHERAN BROTHERHOOD Legal Re6eMle Lile lruurance lor Lutheraru

PIICliHc LUtlo".R CoIIq. CIIffonI 0I00R. ........ ' •• kl ..... , Washiqtoa

TACOMA

BUILD YOUR ESTATE NOW!

*

YOUR FUTURE STARTS TODAY

1

I - II

r�:"� '0 1 11' '·"1 t ' 1 . Alumni I

.............. " . ���_ . ..-.l PACIfIC L'U TH E K A. C O L L E G E

Local LSA Sponsors I �tUne Area Conference

" Faith o f O ur Fa t hers " w il l b e tit M aj o !' P h i I i 11 theme Q t he L. . .Area C on t.e rence E. Hauge, Dean to be held on lhf! P. L . C. am ]J us , and R e gistrar o f S turday a n d S unday, Feb. 10 and 1 1 . Pacifi c Lu t her an Stuupn t s from th e Cen t ra l 'Was hington

C o llege of Ed uca on and the 'Cni" ersitr C ollege n o w o n

o f 'Was hing t o n will a ugl11ent t he 10 al lea s e of absence , L. . .!L group. <tIThed in Park-

M is;j B etty Ga r to n . a :\'ational L . S . A. land la st Friday, adYi er, viiI p eak � unday aflernoon on

J an ua ry 2 6 , for "�f ' P l ace in t h e Ch urc h . " O t h e r s ap-

a stay here. This lleanll g on (he p r o g ra m Saturday lel'e-n in g are t h e Re . Cl a re n ce Jo h ns on , first t I' i ]J home

Ta oUla. w h o w i l l .... iI·e a t a l l on nfte r 2 8 mo nths "Whithe.r Our Lutheran C h urch ." a nd rJ f seni ce ove1'-1\1 ' 8:; B et ty Ea.tl n, former L e i t e , now sea� came as a a l t ellding th . U n l ve r s j t y or Washingt o n .

surprise to a ll , who wlil gil'e an ;\.shram talk tl unday.

Re gis tration will p recede t he Sat ur- ! l1cl udin g Major

day meeting, wh ich be gins at 7 : 3 0 in H a u g e himself.

the Calleg'e C hapel . Gree ti ngs a nd m us i- Dea n and Regis­

cal n umbe rs will b e incl ude.d in t he pro- t r a r of PLC since

gra m. A s oc ial in th recrea ti on room 1 !1 2 G , 1\1 a j 0 I' wHIl games Rnd a song fes t wi l l fo llo w H a u g e returned the m eting. De '"o ti o ns a t 1 0 : (I I) wil l [rom t h e lIIedi­

close Ie day. terranean t h e a-

The , u n(]ay sche dule be gins with tel' of war, where

Mati ns a t : 1 - , conti n ues with B i ble he has been serv­

C la:s, cond ucted by D r J . P . Pflueg I' i Jl g' w i t h t h e

frolll 9 : 4 5 to 1 0 : 4 5 , and I l : () O sen'ices a rmy il' COl'l'S.

oel' a ,viii h cone .rt J1re'S�nt ference.

hw·ch. Af te r din- Entering t It e e,ollo na l a nd business mee t ing sen'ice i n J une. h .1 in t h e Cha pel a t 2 : 1 5 . . \ 1 9 4 2 , as a l ieu­by the "Choir f the \Vest , " t e n a n t , �l a .i o r

at <1 ; ) , wIll c lo : e the Co n- Hauge has seen

h.e l ocal LS� l)['e hosu to t h e Con-e i v e con ti ne nt s i uring h i s stay

[erance d elega tes. The following com- in the s e r v i c e . I it ees w r . a.p p oin ted by the LS.\ He h as Sil e n t t h e

ounci l : printi ng of llrogra m s , Co rinne greater p a l' t 0 f Erickson ; r gi st ra t ion , Do l' . S t o l'aasli ; t hat time in th h o u . j ng , Hele. n Lund fwd T d Rei r z ; �I e d i t e l' l' a n e a n games, E un i ce T o n'e nd : s on gs , I sa bel area - E g y p t , Hal':'ltad ; re f r sh me t l , Jo elyn Lynne ; l' u n i s , i c i l y .

-FEBRUARY 8 , 1 9 !1 5

�lajo!' rhilip E . Hange, recen tly returned froUt \·(" 'SCI\.<; fluty, wishes only t hat all VLCit{!s in til f;()l'yice oul(i 11ll.\' hall t h e �IlIlIe pt'jd lege t hat was 1 " , so that th .r coullL all IIwet eac.lt oth '1' hl'l' Oll the> cam pus. �JaJOl' H ug'e will b · the speakel' t thl' alnnllli , . 'union bRnqlle . to be held here Sllll(l a�· • . Febl·UI\[,�· 1 1 .

r·· .... ' , .................. , Au nd I LSA Con- ;

fer nee I : : t...-..........J-_J-J-,..J-l.I ••••• ll�

); O . ..

bumnl SA HER FOR REUniOn Major P. E. Hauge ,ri ll

Speak at Banqu et l\Iain speaker at t he Alumni banque-:

wllich wi ll h i gllllght the an u ual retlU.n

of our grads and former st uden ts to ou.r c amp us on S unday, Fe bruary 1 1 . wtl� be Maj or Philip E. Hau ge , at home on s hort leave from the European war theater.

I pre-war y rs, the reu ni on wa" he ld for tlll'ee day'S but the iast few years the alumni board h a s limi ted fe.5-tivities to a one-day affai r .

The "Choir of th e 'Vest," under the

leadersh i p of P rofessor Gunnar :l-Ialmi ,

wil l p r es ent its annual concert at ,, : 0 1)· i n the a fternoon i n Trin ity Luthera n

C h u r c h . Follo wing a long-established

tradition, former mem bers of the ch.ol" wi l l sing, wit h t he p resent gro up . Chris­tia nsen 's arrangement of "Be<luUiul

SaYior."

After t h e concert, t here will be " opel house" in the do rmitory, giving fonner PL Ci te s an o P P ol' t un ity to see the many

iJnprovements o n the campus.

The last e",� ! t 0 he day will be the ban que t in t h e C o llege Dining Han a�

G : 3 0 . lIIilton );esvlg , ' 3 5 , Al um ni Pr&li­

dnet , is to be toas tmas t I'. The pr ice

for t he dhlller, which will consist 0 tur ker wi t h all tI e trim min gll, i 1 . DO , Tri ni ty G u i ld i s servi ng t h meal.

l\Iusic will be furnished by PLC' s ( r i n g quartet. ('onl pose.d or Be t ty Lo t·

n ieke . fl!' Vi ol in ; :'.ln rion S o l t ! a n , sec­ond Yiol i n ; �\.l b e rJ; l"' u lm , \'iola" and Fr ance lle Shocl! , cello. T h e fe- tldtle_ wi l l elo . w i t h a sh ort t a l l;: hy Dr . .illa t ­

( Con t i n u ed on Page F u r ) Doster , Vedis useboe. I t�l

.y and Co rs�ca. For m i l i tary

. rea sons , .M ajor Ha uge declined to l al le &hout Ilis I . llulttary e xp enences, but told !l1stead ot some 01 Ius con tac ts with t ile people """------....... ''' ....... -''' ....... -''' ........ ""'"

Homecomers View Art

of the lands which h e has ,"isited.

While i n Pa le stine , Major Hauge went t.h ro ugh the Z io ni st communistic

colonies. In t he m everyt.hi ng is ce nt ral ized-t he pe op le eat i n common dining halls ; most of the cou ples Jive in sin gle rooms, and th ei r children are cared for

As an a ttrac tion to the ho meco mers , at school-provided do rmi torie s. One thing whic.h is espec ia lly emphasized in the

an art exhlblt wtil b e shown in th e art sc hoo l s is the nobl eness of agriculture. The Jews in various co untries have tended

room at the s o u h end of Main bal l Sun-toward the professions rather t h an agric u l ture , and hav," h ad l ittle farming ex­

day afternoon , F�bruary 1 1 . The ex- pe rience . Now t he peo p le . as colonists. m ust m ake farming t heir ou t s tanding

hlblt wi l l be t h e work f the for ty-th ree work. Everyone works in t h ese colonies . The p aren ts seem to think th e ed uca­

stud ents of 1.IisB Ber enro iled in the

rt courses t his semester. The classes represented are u n dampn als In art, oil paJn tin , public school IU·t , junior

high choo l art, and crea tive desi gn .

tional system a yery good one, and do not consider i t strange to have their chi l­

dren wit h them o n lr an h our or so a day. The Zionist colonies, which were estab­

l i shed a fter the Fi rs t World War, haye representatives from many countries .

( Continued on Page Two)

Cadets Return to Childhood Scenes And Educate the Future Generation

LYCEUM SERIES BRINGING NAT'L OPERA TIC QUA RTET

The ne..xt number on the P. L . C . Nellie Risa. Ju ni or , and Ll Uiun Thol'- . leii'soll, Senior. began last we k at Ho r- Lyceum series WII! be a cone

.ert pre-

aee �r ann Grade Sch oo l . Toget her t hey 'I sen ted by the NatIOnal Ope:ll.tJc Quar­

teach a first grade cl a of t hit·ty-some tet, to be given Friday evenID�, Febfu­

children. ary 9 , at 8 : 3 0 p. m at the FLrst Bap-t i st C h urch Aud itori um .

Com ing ctJents FRIDAY, FEB. 9 : • ationa l O per­

at ic Quarte . F o u r t h Concert i Lyceum '. �ries. First Baptist Church, Tacoma.

S A T U H Dc\ Y. PEB. 1 0 , and DAY, FE B. 1 1 : C on fer­ence here. P LC witt be hosts to students from the lini versi ty of 'Vashillgton in Sea tt le and Centra l Was hi ngto n College of E d ucation in Ellensburg.

S UNDA Y, FEB. 1 1 : Alumni Re­unio n . ,,·rajor Hauge to speak a t b a nq uet .

F R IDAY . FEB. 1 6 : All - school mixer "Feb Fun" in college g ill . Progra m to be 'PreSented by bo th students and acult .

N EW STU DENTS REGISTER Twen ty-one new atudents regis t ered

for the econd emester at PLC, a c c ord.:'

'rhis term the Ed ucat i ona l Depart­

ment . under the directi on of Miss Anna

M. N tels n. boa ts t hirteen cadet teach­ers. .Aiter months of observin g in s hools hro ugho ut Parkland and vi­cinity, these six dorm and seve n da y s t udents are tak ing oyer a o d a.ct ually

teach in g the cl as ses . \Vhen a ked how

th y l i ke 1 • th e usu a l rem ar k is, " I t · s a l o t dlff 'en t si tti ng behind th e desk ,

but it·s fun." Th ose who have actually

begun their cadetting talk eagerly of

the l i ttle tots wh o have already learned

Gl'lu:c nirke. tol, Senior. I!\ cadetting

a t Parldand Grade School wh ere she

t e aches rea din g and numbers to first

The Quartet, under the d irect ion or lng to the registrar's files. This is two Leo Ta ubman, p i anist and direc tor. are less t han the number leaving coliet;:e Polyua S toska, sopra no ; Winifred Held t , d UI'i n �' or at the close ot the fir t se-grad ers . �

contralto ; Gil bert R ussell , teno r ; a nd es t r. T h e to t al spring semester regis-(1tl.I·oI YII HawleJ, Ju ni or , is a lso at Jess Walters, ba. ri tone. tratl.on to date is 1 6 6 .

Parkland Grade School, where she The National O il ratic Quartet b rin gs

teaches t h e fourth grade in reading and to the concert platform a d istinct i ve

E nglis . the a r t or " ' l monizlng the cit ru s ; " and of t he apples and candy the cadets re- Richard Bates, Senior, is th o calve as a resu lt . The cadets teach in mascu l ine cadet in the grou p .

program of ou tstand ing com positions In only music literature, Among them are :

He \'\That Joy Doth Fill M y Eear by Bee­the sc hoolroom mornings and return to the coli .ge for cl asses In the afternoon . They will do tht throughout the en tire

term. Thes "teachers of tom o rrow" in­

clude the following j uniors and senIors :

teaches t he sixth grad at ; ern Hill Grade School.

Annie Lien, Juni or, not only teaches

first grade reading a d third grade

( C on ti nu ed on Page Three )

lhoven, uartet from "Rigoletto" by Verdi, and Dance a chchuca by Sullivan.

The programs In this series are un­

d er the a Us pi ces of the Tacom Music Ass oc iation.

Of the students not retu rnin g for th spring te.rm. 16 were In tlle College or Liberal Arts and 8 in the College of

Ed ucation , One t udent, Maxine Strand­wold, completed t he requirements fo!' a d eg ree at the end of t h e first semester ; five st uden ts-Earl e Mac Cannell, Roy Larson, Russell Murray. Gerhard ROSin,

and Lee Folsom, left for various b ra nches or the Service.

PAGE T' 0 C O IJ.E(; E Feb ruury 8 , 1 �) 4 5

H i: DOOR .G DA�TI I T H T H E L U T E A � � n . I I N T H E S E RVI C E . J r. and �l's. 'e,·ern Ki tt le�o n of

Published tl ye l'Y t wo week.s d u rI ng t il sellool year by Par k1and recwuly a.JJnOun ed the en-stu dent>; oj' Pac i fl c �; lthel"all . :ollege . . .

Gt"I'hal'(l ( G u i z) !:tv In, who llR. sed I gu,""elll en t or t h e i ' URughte,r. , .JaniCe, to O ffice: RooUl 1 3 0 Ielephone . Ran ite S 6 1 1 I t l pre-ln(i u t lOl l pbYSl al In t wee k , e.-- CpL Th om a ' H. Taber of m t e n Isla n ,

lib cription pl'ice-� l . O O per 'lear p eets to be ca l led withi n th n e x t . few York. Ja nice II' s a [rosh here la,;t

Entered as second class lIla tter, Octob er 2. 1 2 5 , at the Post Offi ce at Pa rkla n d , "Washington. under the ,\ ct or

�Iarc h :3 , 1 8 7 9 .

* * *

EDlTORLUj STAPF -EDlTORS _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ A X J.TA. Sl'UEX. ALIoE ma-n u "

Associate Edi tor _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Theod o re Reitz

Sports R porter _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Wal t Kunschak Re porters ; Virgl Ja l:rrlck, Daplme He ll..ul an , Helen And rson , Artl y s Bred vo l d ,

Thelm <L M etzger, B ryl Berga n , Anita th, Ruth Jo h nson , L o u i lle To l l fel d t .

Ad" Iser _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ .. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Ml's. Ruth Franck

* * *

m o n t h . He is t a k i ng his :;elllester exams year , :1. n d g nulullted from P. L. H. S.

I t I, is "'cck . . 'eve1'<'1 s t udellts saw E d Berg. gel,

eX-' 4 3 , in Port land , Or . , recently. Ed 'i. now station (1 at t he Ba rnes Cen tra l

Hospital i l l Vancouver. d d l'e RF : l'vl. Ed\\'. Berusagel AS. T 3 9 4 7 9 7 l G , :lIed .

' . . . C. C . 1 9 7 1 , arnes Geu. Hasp . , Vancouver, \Vash i n " ton.

Cadet - Mid.shipman. t:hal'les Cvctich, ' 4 3, h a ' co m pl et ed s yen m o uths of - ,1. trainin g as a deck Cadet-Midshipl1ian

aboard a me rchant s h i p carryfng vital

two years ago. .!\. n u m ber of guest s gather ci recent ly

ill F'a ith Tem pi in acoma f r a. re­

ceptio.Jl. h onori.l1g Ml·. and _'\II.J' • L ro) Carlson , Who wel'e m arried two weeks b fo r(: �11'$. .tr lson IS t hb for mer Wal­

etta ItbFns h uh , last 'ear raduate of the College of E d uca tion at I'LC. At

he r c ep ti Q n , Mrs. Marjorie Edg.hill flnd Mias Kora Kjesb u resided , and among those serving was Mrs, Mildred R I'od l , l td MarL i ll . A l l thr e are mem-

BCSIXE � STll .li I war supp l ies and has j ust reported to bel'S or tli e sen ior class. BUSINESS MA.! 'AGlllR _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ DORO'l'HY XII';�IAX t h e U n i t d S 'It Mer ant ::Ifarlne

T 0 we ks n 0 In 'Vent ura , al itor­uia, l\Iiss Doris Irene Herren , ex-' ,14 , d a u ghter of R ev, A. J. Herren of Brem­erton, became LIl J hl'ide oJ Dallas Ar-

Assistan l Manager _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ !'.larian Butler

BusiJl.ess Se retary _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ l n ga Joh n so n Advertisin g Manager .. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Corinne Eri 'lson CiTe l aU n _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Oe ce l i a Gal'd Un Sen-icemen' s Cll'CUlati n _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ An nubell e Birkes tol Excllange _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Grace l3 irkes tol

oliolLors: Marg ie arlson, Gra ce Gulhaug n. Rumoh r G u lh uge n , Jocelyn L)'n ll�, Ruth Djerl<ap, and Sylvla Blom l i e .

Academy at KI ngs Point, 1'. Y., for ad­

di tio na l traini ng, Ch uc k N'as ery ac­tive in sp o rt s here at PI. , Elspeci a l J y

in f oo t b al l . nolu :\L a rtln, ex-' 4 4 , seama n first class,

Aft r 13 months In he Sou th Paci fiC, son of L. A. }, artIn of Tacoma. Atter

J<Jnsign Sterling Harshman, ' 4 3 , recently the ceremony rec pUon w held at

spen t a 2 0 -day leave w i t h bls W ife, Ule asitas Sprin gs home of dr. and

Advlser _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ O. .1. Lorm er V . llila , !won e r , ' 4 0 , Sle l' was

amuel E u ban ks, Th e bride and St uen on of t h e PLC " t:;rea ls" wIlen Coa ch

O l son 's lillllad be came nationally fa- bl'i d groom , who plan to make th ir

m ou s. temllorary h me in 'Ve n t u u ra , will honeymoon to Washington n the n ar

UaJph Schitlio.", ex-' 4. 0 , lO r1l1er M. i\L future. Tbi§ and That cul umnfst now stall 11 d ir D rem rt n ,

vlsi ( 1 !ti:; allru1. ma ter a nd frien ds Tbll da Hellman , ex-' 4 4 , is in t he This is the first campus.edited Mo ring .£ ast. For some 1 7 .o dd years cdiwrs aro u n d PLC Oil January 2 1 . Cadet Nurtle Corps, recelvina her train-

and assistants have spent tbe n ight before publication down in (he inner 'anctU!1l Dr. Pflueg el' TeIJO ls chan;; II f ad-i ng at E m m a n uel Hospital in P ortland,

of ) hason. Cox Company's princi.na establ ishment, eeing to it that the front pa e r l; for t wo of his thl'pe suns in tbe G lori a �oelle a tl'e was born to Mr.

is right side up, and char your paper j read w come hoc off the . ress the nt:Xt serl'ice . Merle, ' 4 0 , Is now in . "ew and lI1rs. L . .1. Satre Q.Jl. ecemb er 1 3. • .

d 1 JJ bl . t Ml'S. Sat re is tb former ElIzabeth Da hl, day, But no 1 nger, For now, starring with this edition, the editorial staff " i l l

I

T l I l n a an Itt 'ell a e .to YJsi , � v- ' 4 0 , and Mr. t:latre is on lea.ve of a b-

:.pend the wee h U C .. ore press time at the Beard Printing offipany, estabhshed . r a l of lhe Lll th. eran MIS Ion lie l d a sence from t he PLC faculty whil e com.

• , •

<

th ere, Ad ress : ( pI. �Ier e H. I>:fluegcr, tn the lower regions of the Chapel butldmg ,

3 11 3 J 3 1 2 8 , Hdg. Rtry. 4 7 5 AAA _ .aN, 1Il et i ng W .s t heological studIes a t Luther

It seems l ittle sad to think that after chc:se many years 'Ie ",!I I no longer �\. P. 0 . . ;i 22, PM San ' rancisco. aU- Seminar '. Hs is gra IJ allng In early F"ebruur) . pr wI aroun Howie' haunt, but the step we are taking is a f rward one. m ng orn la. ::-lew add ress tor Jesse, ' 3 7 ;

the advantages f [he new rrangemem will be ( lC saving of staff tim and money Jeso;e p, Pflueger, A C R T. Bomber

f d Fivh tillg , q lladron 1 0 , P r, 0, c/o ormerly expen ed in takin[( (Opy to l'a oma. bringin ack galley proofs, etc. P. 1-1 . , �a n ]!'t'ancisco , 'alifornla.

Tben our priming class wi l l have some practical experic:ncc in newspaper work i n rrc. Gil 1'1 " , IUchter, ex- .l 0 , who setting up the school paper. sp en t a long s tret ch [n t h e Al eutIans,

'* -(:( "* was trans! .fred so me time a g o t an­

Maj or Hauge, when imerviewed by y ur rep one r, srressed the greu en ; yment which our servicemen ob tain from receiving and reading thei r coUege paper, which i a good springboard for what we have to say.

ot h I' organlza tion and Rent bark to he States, ' arly in November he was m a r­ried t o Miss Marjorie H l l , a Lincol n

Hi gh graduat in Tacoma. Presen t au­

d ress ; PCc. Charl f,s Y .. Richter, 2 0 9 5 2 2 5 8 , Hq. and Hq. Blry. AAT • Fort Blis s ,

Texas.

Two former PL Cl te now attending Luther 'rlteol o �lcal Seminary at t. Pau l , ",ere home durIng t Ie hol idays

and visit d tile cllOol . They are John

La rsgaa rd . last year's stUdent body presid ent, and Bud Lu tnes , '43,

Charlotte Swanson, ' 4 4 , who is now leacWn g at Issaquah, Wnsll., visited the campus S u nday, Janu ry 1 4 , Charlotte

was associate-editor ot the M, M . last year.

John BauUell , editor of the M. M. laRt year, was hom e for Ohri tl tm a vacation. After attendIng MIdland Coll ege In Fre-

We wane co keep the "Lute in the Service" a l ive, vital wlumn. T do this we must have more news about those servicemen . Many of YOll srudents are receiv-111 letters from our fellows wh are in lhe armed service. Why not pass on inter­esting items to the editor so [hat the other Lutes can hear about them? The serv ice column is the one parr of the paper which interests these former srudes m st, because [here they read about their college pals. And you servicemen, how about writing us about yourselves? We need everybody' help to keep thi column of maximum

Hal'IT $01008, ex' 4 3 , who was wound­ed while on duty In tbe South aclfic

mont, 1 ebt'aaka, last s li mmer and tbis

fail , John i s en tering Western Theo­

I glea l S min ry at the :une pl ace la st

interest . Won't you rum in changes of address and news about the men in uniform to

Ted Reitz, service ed itor? You'll be doi ng a good deed for the Lutes in the armed forces, and for. yourselves.

This was to have been the alumni edition of the M. M. bur because of the i l l . ness of the alumni ediror. the local staff has put our the paper. Although we can' t take (he place o f the alumni editor, we wish to extend to you grads a cordial wel­come to PLC in your ann , I r union Sunday, February 1 1 . And we are look ing forward to a va tion when yo take over in a later issue.

Home on Leave (Contlnned from Page One )

a year or so ago nd Will! sent ba k to the States to recuperate , Is now in the Phli ipJ)ines .. He writes , "Yo u may be

me t hat I wlll be among the first to look forward to a.ttending Dr. Pflueger's

Bibl e cou rs es , or . Malmln's .m usic

cla.sses, and so on down t h e line." Ad­

dress: Pvt . Harry Soloos 1 � 1 l 3 9 3 9 , Co­

G., 3 2 T n r. APO 1 0 6 , c/o Postmaster,

San Francisco, Californla.

o n th. kill Ness and Hal Rei tz, both ex '" 3 ,

visi ted the ca mpus on a recent eak­

end . They are botlJ work in g In d eten se ind ustries In Seattle.

Anne Ne lson, ' 4 4 , who Is teaching at Lake City in Seatt l e. was another re­

cent visitor. A Bon was born I st Oct, 2 6 to 2nd

Lt. and Mrs. Richard Erling Boland.

RIchard Erling, ex ' 4 3 , la now over.seas.

A son was born race,ntl y to Ir. and �Irl! , Al bert A. Stephenson, rs,

Stephenson hi tlie former Gladys Swen.­

Illlld, '30.

S/Sgt, noy Schm ndt, ex-' 4 3 , tOTlDer

ASB presi de nt, has been In ftaly tor

more than a. year . Roy, in a l etter to the faculty, r c lIs the "FamJ ly- hrls­

tlan Spirit I and countless others h ave

enjoyed at PLC. I ce rtai nly am gOing

to renew an my acq uai n tances at PLC

when we again ret ur n to that great A da.u ghter named Melissa fary was

born 00 De . 6 0 Mr. and Mrs. Stanley . U. S." Address; S/Sgt, R, Schmandt,

H. 4 5 9 t h BG ( RY) , APO 52 0 1 e.w YOI'\( Dahl, both ' 3 7 , of Parkland. Mrs. Dahl Majo.r Hauge spoke to one resident woman who was a g raduate ot Columbia City. is the former Norma Preus.

1Jniverslty. Another recen t birth Is tha ot Steven James to 1[1'. and Mrs. Ma.rvin LoftnesEf Major Hauge's flrst contact with any educational syste m after leaving the

Slates was Capetown Univers! y, South Africa. He was wel l im pressed with th

peo pl e of Call own , who rt;�mlnded him of the Canadians. The university was founded by Cecil R h ode , the famed English diamo nd magnate, and wa plI.Herned alter Oxford .

CHAPI<JL QUO'['ES of Taco m a. " Pappa" Loftness was ho me "'''uccess is to do ihe wlll of G Od . I f on f url o ugh from Scott Field, Illinois,

In hi s travels, Maj or Hauge saw matj,y ruins, among them the Yall y of Kin gs nd Luxo r (Tn bes ) and King Tn t's tomb i n Egypt , and late.r, Pompeii . He rema rked that because of the excel l ent dyes the colors on t he walls of t he

ancient tomb of King Tut were as brJII\ant and cl ea r as 'f. th ey had been painted only a year ago .

WIlen asked regar di n g h is impr ssion of th e cha.nges at PLC, Iajor Hauge rep lied that he ha h ard abo ut the improvemen ts from h is f ami ly and frie nd s and therefore vms n ot 80 greatly surpri"ea olE 'en tho ugh t h r e h ave been l ulte a lew changes," he obsel'ved , "st l l l to me i t is PLC." peakin g f the S ill! nts, 11 contillu d : " I th i nk one o f the finest t hi ngs you are d o i n g here is th e sen d i n g

o t h e M o o r i n g Mas t overseas. v e espec. ia l ly appreciate t ha t th oples are sent I n en ve lopes , so. that we r ec eive them in :3 o r 4 week s , instead of ta ki ng 3 0 1' 4 months as would be th case o ther wise. "

e can feel as uTed that we are doing

the wUl of God, the l i fe th at we Ih'e w' lI be a uccess in the sight of God . "

.Rev. A .. S, Olson , J\lI · sion ary In hlna for 30 y aI'S

• • •

"U a college ed uca ti n l good it help to fit you to carr)' 0 t G o d ' wiII

and p urpose In thIs orId . " "·Wha tever college car e r you 11008

In li I • a leach r' , a lawyer 's, a d o c­

tor· s, or a bookkee per's , you sh o uld be more than th at. You sho ul d be fir t

of all cul ti\'ated a nd nligh tened Ilwn and women . "

Rev. �. B . Thorpe,

at the tillle of his son's arrivaL

The ki n gl iest kings aTe cro wn d with , t horns .

* • ..

Best they honor thee who honor in thee onlr wha Is best.

1 04 "Tacoma j\vc. Bnlwv. 2 106

--------------_._--- - _. _----_ ...

! tlb l'uary , 1 �J i :)

Gladiators Defeat Proctor Creamers

T I l e PL Jive won its ft til ga m e o f

l he season a s it down ed t he Proctor • t reet C rea m I'S by a �COl'e of 4 1 t 3 7 . D sfllte the close m rg in o f -vict ry, the

wInners Were ill the lead d u rlllg the e.Iltlre game . The game, I owev I', \Va c lose all the way, wilh th e two team

watclung each other a l most basket for

lll\ 'ket. Offensive lead er of the gam was Hoff

of lhe Cream r with 1 6 p oi n ts. Tue

game was th econd Vic 0 y or the ea­

on for the Lutherans over t h e ream-

erl:l.

Girls' bas k e lbil l l tea [o u r defeated team two by a seorll of 1 4- 1 0 t o becom

the girl�' bas k e t b a l l cl1 aLll IJ!ons. The scure w a s 8-8 at t ll h a l f Ilnd 12-8 at

the third q uarter. �1embe rs of th win­

niug team are Louise TolJrtlldt. ca p­La D ; Carol Ele r on, 1ea11 LoV\' Id , !\Ia y

vel' 'on, R uth Pflueg r , n n abelJe �'k­est I. Pat Holthusen, and Carol 1:'et r­

SOIL Te a m two was ' talned by Ce e li a

Gardlln . 'Tea ms one aDd thre wi l l pJ y

T uesdny . February 6 , fo r t h ird nd fourth place.

A folk d a n cing cla s, a n d u bowling PLC (41 ) (37) reamers a n d a tu mb li ng t am are b ei n g O l'gan-

Folsom ---- ( 1 3 ) ( J 6 ) _ _ _ _ _ __

HoJT lzed as outside act iv ities of W. A . A. • 'orde g _ _ _ _ ( 1 3 ) ( 1 ) _ _ _ _

__ _ Booth 't'umbling practice wi ll begin a s so o n as

Bel'nd t .. -------- ( ) ----- O'Brien the basketball Rson 111 o ver. Drammer _ _ __ ( 6 ( 3 ) BotUgcr -----

The 'ain y weather that we haYe had Hoain ------- ( 5 ) ( 4 ) _ _ _ _ Granlund

has s topped practical l y a l l ten nis p lay-Substltutes--PLC : Redlske ( 4 ) , PIb} , In g OD the co l lege c ur t , but Old 01

Kunschak. CREA�1E R S : Zeke ( 7 ) . was out enou gh b ut a. week go to ...... ..:-.. Park land ardware

Bicycles

permit some ten nis p l ay i n g. Loraine

Purvis and Ruth Pflueger t ook ad vant­

ag e of the dry courts to play th ree sets

of tennis o ne afternoon.

non • � Fl r t h i n k t ha t I 11a 1 1 nev e l' I IYe

Frosh Squad Loses to Seattle Pacific

PAG-.E T H I{ illE

Missio nary Shows M ovies

Rey . .. rthur S. Olson , a mlss ionan in

C h i n a, [ the past 30 ye r , Wil' the

Th", P LO Fl'e 'hman ba!>l elbal l t am gu .st speaker at a special ro e ting of

the Mi ssi on Society held Wednesday was detail bd by a ta ller, more expel'i- evenl ng, Ja n . 2 4 , in the Re re a tion

",nc d at tle Pacific College cjuintet by I roo m.

,1 score of 7 6 to 4. 1 . uI'ing the firs t After g iving a short talk on Pearl

half the Frosh t am mad e a real nam e H arbor day In China, Pastor Olso

showed three movin� pic tures, whlch of it, holding the Seal lie squad 0 a

" . 1 he bi msel f hac! ta ken , 0 the War in 5 to 0 0 halftlme lead. I t Vi as Chi na an d the ef ects of t he wat o n the

in the fin' I q u r te that th ea t t le 11l-e i Ch inese peop l e . liS d i ts experie ce and lle.i ght adv n . t Misslon.ar Olson was l'y lng a M ls­IJ.u·e u nder the backboa rd s to assure Its

'si n in Honan Provi n ce at the tIme or

'ictory. The PLC Prosb team \vas un­ab le to stop its tal ler oDPon t , and

;vas slIowed unde r by a flurry of Sea tt l e

baskets w h i c h r a n u p the rather one-

PLO ( 4 1 ) li'olsom _ _ _ _ _ ( 5 J N rdeng _ _ _ ( 2 1 )

Ber nd t _

_ . _ _ _ . _ ( 2 Brammer _ _ _ _ ( 6 ) R n - ---- - - ( 7 )

( 76) Seattle Pac.

( 3 4 ) _ _ _ _ ClaroI'd

( 1 7 ) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Hall

( 1 2 ) _ _ _ Uek ne _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Hanks

( 1 3 ) _ el amarter

ub s ritutes-PLC : None. ::3. P. C. :

Wi! on. A ll lad , C tier.

DEBATERS EXPO U N D AT SPC

[he Japanes e i nYasl on. nd because of

his d ecision to s Y. Id rou :b t o help

th e C hinese people. He and is wU

were interned at W iksien , ha nt u n g ,

j'rom M arch through August of 1 9 4 3 . On September 1 5 th Y sail d for India

on n small Fren h boat, which met the

rep atria t i o n sblp Gripsholm.

Cadet Teachers ( C ontinued from Pag n )

arithmeti at Horace .l ann. but works

in t h e s h o ol libra ry al\ wel l .

I rJOl'lc Edghil l . S Iliol', is ca detting

a t Park Aven ue School . She teaches eve ry thlug n the first g r ade .

Two d b te team' representing PLC LOl'ene 'arjte 'iI -on, Sen ior, is a at the p ract ice lourn ment m et t e- Kindergart n teacher at Horace :'.Iann Repair Parts

To ee a sillier looking fliv. a t tI e Pacific Col l ege , Frid ay . Februa .' Grade School . Painting A fllv that 's owned by Joe and 'Walt, . 2, won ne decision and dr w one t ie l ihll'cd BrOlUand �fartiJ\, Senior,

'Ih only IUv without a fa ult.

112 Block East of College Fl1vs are made by Fo rd , you kno w,

But only gas CAn rnak . them go.

Jetland & Palagruti a.clCic A y nue

First i n Floor Coverings Tn rn a 2 , Wa. hin "ton

out 0 a t h ree round series for e cl leaches geogrll.p _ , spe l l i n g, and mathe­

tea m . Colleg&! pa rtiCi pating were C o l- mat1c to slx lh graders at Park land 1 ge ot Puget , o u n d . Seattle PaciIlc 01- Grade School . and ;\[arlan Butler, Ju­

lege, Seat t l e College . and Paclflc I,uth- nior. t ach e th sil th gr de there Ii o.

eran College. o l lo win g t h e tourn a- ;\nnnbclIc Birke wI . Sen ior, 13 t ,aoh­m ut was II. !lInn I' given for th de- iug E n glish, l1terat u r , nnd oclal

ba lers ill the S att le aclne ('o1 1e"e d i n - tudl&s t t he e i ht h a n d n inth gra d es n g hai L a t F arkland J unior gh Scllool.

The men's team consisted of ViI'gil A lee Kaahn u, 1unior, I ' cadettlng a t

Sava e and Charlton own,an. l i n e Cen ral Grll.de S�hoo l wb re sb lea hes

S mith and FI ut h John son made u p the t h e fourth grade.

CASIO NAL FUR. ,TURE LIN LEU�[ - ReG '

I women' sect io n . Ardis Sen�rsoll, Senior, tea hes the .... ...... "--:;l t hi rd and four t h grades at arkland

���ot�!��\G�:!�E

e� i FO������S S:��C E Gr::en c:o:�Ol' wben h e h oldeth bls SH D - BE DDI�G

DRAPERIES

.. , . BR·Og:O���:�� .. �. ::.���.�:�.�...! B�f�=�"n��f�!.I C peace., Is co unted wise .

• *

You have not convel' led a man be­ca use YQU b a ve silenced h inl .

Q UALITY KN ITTING CO.

934 COM ME RCE

RAYM OND ELECTRIC CO.

8 1 3 P CIFIC AVE E B dwy 1 7 1 2

��-:;] § M O R1 U A RY lj/ 17 Phone

TACO�tA .\ I\in 1 AVE. 7745

��...q.

TRICKS • JOKES · MAGIC

Customes - 'l'uxe<los - Serpentine!!

Neal E. Thorsen 9 2 6 'h Broadway � in 4 8 6 1

Girls' Sports Clothes

MAKE GOO D SCHOO L GARMENTS

See Them at

Washington Sports Shop 9 1 8 PACI FIC AVENU E

Johnson & Anderson GROCERIES FLOUR HAY GRAIN

On the Moun ain Highway ETC.

Parkland, Wa sh.

m:::::::::::::::::::::::E:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::�H !II AN DERSON LU MBER COMPANY ii! m 9802 PAC I F IC AVEN U E ill m GRanite 73 1 I !!! iH::.::::!!::::::! ::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:�:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::::':E�::::':::.::::::::::::::::::::�iJ

Peerless Grill Xott'(l rot· their Em iene .

PI'Olllpt Sel'Yice, and Fine Food 9 1 5 Commerce :\1A. 9 7 0

BROADWAY

MOTOR CO.

Specialized Auto Repairing

Standardized Prices

7 1 4 B roa d way Bn. 3 6 2

CO L LEGE HAI RCUTS

P A R K L A N D B A R B E R

C. R. MARSH

BERGE'S

Where the

Elite Meet

To Eat Parkland, Washington

SEARS, ROEBUCK AN D CO.

Broadway at 1 3th

lL TH E GO OD N ESS HE NAM E I M P LI ES

HO MOGEN IZED

M E D O SW E ET K R EA M I L K

IIIII

P -\G-� I" ' R P,\CIFIC LCTHERA:\ COLLE A': Febr uary . J � H ;j

"Vanishing Ra eU Adds Five Members

e.vel'a l new )ten Ita v j oined t.he de­

vleted ran s of Coll ge J oe's Oil ur

campus t llis sem ester.

Al'Dold Towe, who hails trom an

Dlego, Califo rnia, all oded Ho over High S 'ho 1 in San Diego. He I a freshman in the Coll ege of LIb ral .Art d Is a dorm studell t .

W e might put "dltto" for Ver110n Bel'g, as Ite a l so comes from San Die ao , Mtended San Diego High Sc ho o! . Is n o w

a l're, hman in the oliega o f Liberal Arts, and Is a dorm stud nt.

_ reil liandran, or Ued in Liberal

Arts, lives in the neighboring lown o f Spa away. He i s llot a native, howe 'er, as he origin ally came from :;\Ion tana . Before coming to PLC , Neil attended

MOllnt Angel Semi nal'y ill Oregon . He Is Ii day student.

Efh'oy \\'-01 $cth from Taco m a , Wash­ington, is a day . tu de nt a n d Is el1Tolled i ll the Ool l e ge of Educa ti n . Edroy for­

me rl y attended onco rdl a C ! lege a t Moorhead, l\1inneso · .

Gail Owen Is st ud ent in the C I I "ge

or Li beral Art s. He is a day student

an d liyes in Tacom a, Robert. l�rlg , a.lso from Tae rna,

graduaLd r o m St dlum Hlgh . choo your years a g o Robert , w h is a I r e 11 -man in Liberal Arls and a day student, ha s eu t w o y aI's of army- serVice,

I DRG to Sleep in Cement Bed

The DR ',; are planning a sl um ber

party t o ollow th� fellt villes of the Febl'u ry F u n mixer on Friday 'ven ing ,

Febl'uar�' 113 . .A th e . l u m iJerl n g, to s y n o tb i n g of

the fun fest, is expected to be s tre n u­

OU ' fh slulUbel'e s wi l l reiruorce thew­

s Ives fo r t he remaining weelcend on a watfle bre a k fast the fo l lo wi ng mornin". Lois Da h l is a t t h e head o f the affair.

1I DRC'r girl are in t te(l.

ALUMNI GATHE F R REUNION

( C Unu d from Pa " One) voId and comm un i ty singIng led by Mr. WeI s.

The IJresent A l u m n i Doard is c om­

po. ed of Rev. Mil ton )iesvt g, pre.s iden! ;

�Irs. Linka Berry, '3 8 , vlce - pr sl­den t ; L1lI ian Gu ll lxson , ' 4. 2 , reco rding

secret ry ; Virginia Jahr !'ltraml , ' 4 0 ,

co rrespo ndine; secretary. Board mem ­ben; at largt i n c l ude D lm ar l\forlense.n,

' 3 2 ; Wi l fr .d J we l l , ' 4 0 ; UnlU la Mac­Do nal d , ' 4 :3 ; ert rude Tin ge lstad , ' 3 :J ;

and C a r l C o l tom, '2 6 . !\fiss Anna. Mar l lel se n is t h e fll.cu1ty representative. :M r8. O Ial Hagen ess, ' 3 0 , is al umn i sec­reta ry.

Each year flve ne.w board mem b &rs

are elect ed at the banquet. He, ding the nomin a t i n o com mittee is 1'Iirs. Rhoda C LASS LEADERS ELECTED ' o u n g , ' 3 5 . The other mem bers ar

The Jmuors are really busy on th I IId red Reese. ' 4 4 : Myron KreIdle r, All-School llix r to be held F b ruary ' 2 6 ; Ober t �ovde, ' 4. 3 and Eve lyn Ek-1 , President Do ris Jurge.rson reports. l u n d , ' 4 2 . T d Reitz, president of the SaIJhl).

Of in terest is the fact that two mo1" Class, and until now the only boy rner s t udent s are Oil the college Doar I in t Ile class, an n ou nced wllh re lief th o f T rustees, T hev are Morris F ord, ' 3 1 , ad di tion of t h e n e w male mem ber ,

H J D 1'1 ' 0 8 ' h l d E l' I and . L. . a 1 , , Robert Larson, IvaI' PI an I' mg _ N I·deng. These boys are m1d-termers The senior class of 1 9 4.4 -40 wi ll be

aUlI b ave 1l0W become soph omores. I f l'm:tlly !'ecelved into the ranks of the At t he first meetLng o r the },' ... �. hml'l1l A l umni A5BO i ati Qu as m embers .

cl t bis Ii'.H e tel' ne offl el'" were The ball(fu t c lllmHtee '�eonlp",se e l ected . R esul ts : Ed Ber nd t, pres! d en t ; o f :'\Irs. Harold " nder o n , ' 3 6 ; Carl Col­

Walt runsc ha k , vlce-pl'eslden t ; Lyd ia tom , Joseph Haru;on, ' 3 ii ; Lillian G ul­LelltZ. seer tary; M I'y E,-ersoll, t reas- I'li O i l . Mrs. Stanley W i llis, ' 4 0 , and urer ; a n d G ordon G a n o , �e !,gel\nt-at- I :\[1'5. -e n ne th J aco bs, ' 2 8. arm� .

�n Bl omqujs� aun o lln red at a r -C6n t D. P. r. meeL i ng lit t hereafter there. would be all night Ii 7h t8 , p rovided

hal th -tud ntt; stay i n their rooms af tel' an I\ \-l polnted ho ur. Dap hne Hell­

man gave a brief talk on fir drills.

\\'h n �'ou want offir Ul'l 'lics C. FRED. CH R ISTEN SEN

T:\'I.'1 X1!:.R ( RosenlmrgS j

!1 1 3 Pa ific A."e. DR. 4 rj Z D

!s:-::::.:====:�:::::::::::::::. :::::::::::::::,:::::::::::::::::�::::::r:::::::==::::::::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::�:::::::::::::iH la m j�l Have Y ur P trait Made the i i i �l: ::: :�� ::: Ii! Moden1' Way Hi ::: m m m tii M DER E PORTRAIT STU DIO m m :� III P HONE MAin 5438 i!l

!II 9TH and PACIF IC AV E U E TACOM A 111 llis:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

SKATE AT

TH E ROL ER BOWL SOUTH TACO MA WAY

IIU H R N

Exams may be o ver, lml the l a u g li " b e fore 7 : 0 0 a. m . followed. by <lo st!llIU­con n e c ted with Lit _01 are still Ilo a t i n "· latin,:: sL am sbower. aro llnd tlte campus. Fa la ( fot' your i n- 'i' " '" ! o r m a. li o n , Pre iden t Roos evel t ' s dog ) In s o m e p a rts of the co u ut.J-Y t b w a s identiflAcl i n the rie ntat i on exam t ransIJ o rtation IJ robl e rn i s 11 critical one, as < Spanish mili tar. lea(}er . According

bu t when it comes to seeurl n � food to one P. L. C . " b J·a.ill-trus ter" th fro m the girls ' rooms a bov !ti m, TED B ro o k lyn Dodgers w o n th e 1 !.l 4. 5 Ros REITZ seem s to do O. K. We h ate to Bowl Game. Other CllOi bi ts included

men tion tH lmes I n such cases, b u t P05-the iden ti fica t io n of I.t. G e neral Court-

sibly JiJVJ\NGEI,INEJ AHRE� DT or ney Hodges as a n i ted States S upreme B ETTY L U RIE K ' could en li.gh ten u C ourt J us ti ce, and Bernard M ontgom ery OIl t h e s u hj ect, "Th e Po ssi b i l i ties o f a as the he ad of .fon tgo m ery, "\V'a t'd & C o . H o me-Ma de P u l l ey. "

Spea ki ng o f misinformation, who was t h e p rop'l.gandist w h o star ted tho r unt or that T EU\iA • f ETZGER had the. mea­

s les ? " Tay he we s h o uld h a v e l et TE L­I\fA In on it. before t h . 'tory w a s s l l I'ead over the nt1r camr/ u s . O r is that j ust

a mi no r de tai l ?

Could i t be t h a t 1 ;:5 GATIDLIN Is

And th ose two \lew m e n i n tl c e dorru VETI,'O ' B E P G a ll (l .AItNOLD TOWE did all righ t , too. u p on eh r arrival frnm San Diego last Monday n i ght. Two of o u r dOl'm-dolis, DAR BAR NEW­TO, ' and RCTH T WE were at the de p o t with bright and s h i n i n g fa ces to meet t he m . _ ice goi n g, bOY S , I

And 14 war m w lcome I h i s[.ri l t lajorillg in Home .eono mic� '? Last. term t o all the new P L. � . g ys a nd Wednesday she was h ostess at a s u ntp-c"l l s ( With s[leeial em p h aSis on til" tuous dl11ne.1' illcl u d i n g' porI' ellops , p o - '" "

t atoes , and baIted bea ns. Among th fi rst entry. )

g ue s t at t hi s f udge-ki tche n banquet were R U TH PFLUEG ' R and LOurSIU TOLLFElLDT. B u t what ]J uzz les m e i s : What wa!'l t h e occasion ?

When t co mes to ea ti ng we are i ll - , s an tl y reminded of 'fall!:. Nln In

. tho

dorm d1ning haIL A nd J ust who IS i t

who gives EAl'l L SO RDE '0 sueh a bad

ti me at that t ble ?

• •

Most of us ar aware of t h e gi l'ls who xercise each n i ght i n the gir ls ' dorm to

the time of recorded m u ic, but now we

ear that CAROJ" EJ .. EFSO� a n rl J LO VVOLD hi gh ly recommend exercises

BERGL N D HA DWARE CO.

9(US P.t rI1CIf' Gn. !l780

STOP AT

Yf rl JPi> for Deli cious Hambu rgers

Hot Dogs Jumbo M ilkshakes

�'['ench Fries a t

9th and Pacific

FRANWELL'S OR I N E OU NTAIN -EATU RES

GArland 5 ·1 3 t;

7 2 2 Brdwy

LUI1(]Lcrg :O rug 11 :{ O l' .\CU'/ C .'\VE.

PRO .. ' £,: G R. 8 5 1 �j

's. Frisbies Bakery

FOH FI XE BAKKRY PRODUCT. Phone G-A . 7 5 9 1

AKES .\ 1'1 '.\ 1 :111 ,

\) 2 1 B l'Oud way TC coma

BR OO KDALE L U M B E R CO.

Mo u n Lai n Hi ghway

BR OOK DA E, W < SH.

RAUl S

Chicken Dinner

Inn

on Spanaway Bus Line

l

P:�:: s�U

p:�:�L

s��,,�E

I

i

�----------------------- I ������������

DT DO 'EVEHY YEAH • . • .

since its fi · t year, Lu­t h e I' a n Brotherhood has shown a ste ady and con sistent growtl], [t has al ways ollel'a t d op t h ouod fo un da- Legal Reserve Life In.mrance for Lutherans

Build Your

Estate Now! Lfon lhe t ime-tested l e g l� L r e s e r v e Il l a n , based on the merica n Experi ence 1'a b l e of Mortality. Lu t h e r a n Brothel'h od is p u rely III u u I - I belongs w h oll y to the policy owne '5.

L.,

M[N�EA-POLIS

Pacific Lutheran College

Herman L. Ekern, President.

Clifford Olson. Agent Parkland, Washi ngton

Your F u t ure J i ll Starts Today! 1 1 11 ;;=- ' III

Alumni

Edition

VOL. 2 % --- --Hauge Pleads For Clear Thinking In Reunion Address Speaks for Service Men; Notes Chonge in U. S. Mind

Making a plea for clear thinking re­ardtng the International lS8ueB of pur dar, Maj. Philip E. Hauge, Dean of 'Ute college on leave, addressed. three hun· dred alumni and trlend8 gathered In the college dining hall and recreation room for the annual Alumni reunion banquet Sunday evening, February 1 1 .

Visibly moved as he began t o speak,

• .t_ " ...

A lumni

.A�

"''lJTH E lt A'N. �OLLEGE

Edi-tio&

FEBR L \ R Y 22, 1 9 4 5 No. 8

REtiRING CHIEF Colonl Gynther Storaasli Golden Jubilee Is Now Chief /itAF Chaplalll Col. Gynther Storaull. '08, haa bMo. A I D" I' appointed air chaplain by the war de- ppea S . ISP ay

partlli.ent and will supervise the acllvl· ties ot all army air torcea chapt!!�1 at Much Progress home ana overseas. He suceeeds Air . Chaplain Charles I. Carpenter of Alex- Completlo-n of Old Main andria, V!o., who wtll �eave shortly for Is lelllC) Accomplished an overseas asatgnm&nt. Tbe Golden Jubilee drive .. 'hlch haa dU�I:

I:n;!o��:

ra:!�

s��

v;:t�;n�:

b::I

I:!� a goat of 5625,000 from all a:>peals 19

to the civilian DlinJstry, and then In I progres�lng quite well, aceording to Dr. 1920 re.entered tbe Army chaplaincy S. C. Eastvold, college president.

where he has served since.. Most re- Some of the funds which have come cently he has been director of the AAF �� ��: al::��y o�e��: �:e�p�

r:�

I:�:

o

::�

chaplain transition couference course f bl hlg

f Old M I C g ft at San Antonio. Texas. P�:Ofs

s��r:"ays ar'e \:�ng o::�::;uct::

at both ends·ot the building. Tbe stalr-Mal Hauge stated that he was not go- C liege Rece"ve way on the north end will be finished Ing to give an address. but just wanted 0 I S In 11 few days and the one on the south to talk with hlfl students regarding some of his experiences and observa- Accreditation. will be started al once. These stairways

run trom the basement to the lop fioor lions gleaned from twent}"-eight months Re\', �lIton Nefj\·lg. 'SiS. pMlot' of the b I A

and cost $ 1 2 ,000 each. of overseas service In the Medlterran- lnunanuel Lutheran Church In Ta· For Li era rts DOR!\IITORY ROO!\IS ean area. coma. who bas been president of the Maner and pledges have been re-SP�AKS ,''On OTHEHS AlunuU .�IaUon the pMt two Pacific Lutheran College was . In- ceh"ed from Individuals and church

In the first part of his talk, he spoke �7�e :eth'::I�_ � �:�;�n:s ��� formed last week that It had been given groups for the refurbishing of forty

ror the 3 8 4 Pacific Lutheran College the highest rating by the Northwest rooms In the dormitory. Flfty-ftve more men now In the armed torces. "It they _41tunni Choose Board Association of Secondary and Higher pledges are needed. to complete this were here tonight," Hauge said. "they Institution" ot Learning. As a result project wblch will Include the finishing would first say tha.t they ha\"e apprecl- Members at Reunion P. L. C. is now a fully accredited liberal ot rooms on the fourth and fltth fioors. ated the letters they have received from arts college and can grant a 8. A, de- Application has been made to the WPB those at hon;e." Letters mean more to At the alumni reunion an election gree in liberal arts. for ftnlshlng the rooms on those .fioors. the service man than anything else. was held �or posts on the alumni board Dr. F. L. Stetson, chairman on the Also Included In the plans tor the

"T h e s e m e n," Hauge continued, and the college board of trustees. Mr. Commission on Higher Institutions for two top stories are a Viking Room on

��:0�:m7:1:'�r��t::P::: ��i��e:!

a�;nt�� Morris Ford, '31. prinCipal ot the Park- ��� ��og

h;:�v������

o;�e;�·�

t::, !: �::m

fo��

t�h:

oo�tt:

ndflo�r�

tu;::\J1�:::

college for the wonderful Improvements land grade school, was re--elected for a follows: "Plek86 consider this as formal Room will be on the south welt corner tbat ha\'e been made on the campus. two-year term as an allHllnl representa- notice that tbe Commission on Higher of the building, where there will be a They would want me to tell you how t1ve on the college board. H. L. J. Institutions herewith gtves recognition tine view ot Mt. Rainier. The room w1ll much they miss you, because they love Dahl, '0 8. Is the other alumnus on the to Pacific Lutheran College as a four· be ftnlsh�d in Norse architecture and you," board. year college of liberal arts with a dl- will have murals of Scandinavian scenes

vision of elementary teacher education. and life.

Shaw, ex ' 4 3 , of Fort Lewis, lege during the past year." years before.

It Is planned to install an elevator in the building. One man has already given U.OOO toward this project which will cost approximately $ 10,000. CHURCH GROUPS PLEDGE The Major .... as loud In his praise of

the men In the armed forces. "I am Retiring members of the alumni The State Department of Education The pledges from church groups are d f th fI htl .. h t t d board are Milton Nesvlg, '35, president; on June 18, 19to, approved PLC as a coming. well. The American Lutheran Ilrou 0 e g ng men, e s a e , Lillian Gulllxson, ' 4 2 , secretary ; Vlr- four-year teacher training Institution as Church groups have raised $65,000 to. �::�d I�s����a�

a:': alr!��,�d;: ��: ��I; glnla Jahr Strand, '40, corresponding of September, 19 39. This approval was ward the Jubilee fund. The W. M. F. of

private Is tbe unsung hero of this war. secretary; and Ursula McDonald, '43. conflrmed June 19, 1 9 4 2. On December the Norwegian Lutheran Church ot l-EOPLI!: VHAXGIXG -- Those wUh one year lett to serve on 9, 1 9 4 3 , tbe Northwest A880claUon of Americ;l have a little over $6,000 left

"It took us forty-two days by ship the board are Unka DeBerry, '38; Carl Secondary and Higher Scbools granted. on their goal ot $40,000. The Columbia gOing over In '42 via Capetown and the Coltom, '2 6 ; Wlltred Jewell, '40: Del· provisional accreditation In the College Conference ot the Aupstalla S71lod bas Suez Canal.. Coming hack by plane it mar Mortenson, '32; Gertrude Tlngel- or Education. And now In 1946 thll pledged $10,000.

took us forty hours Including stops. stad, ' 39 ; and MI8lI Anna Marn Nielsen, &.88oclatlon grants full ucredltatlon to In Tacoma the drive tor the Dew Tbis is symbolic of the change in the faculty representative. both liberal' arts and edueatlon dept.. gymnaaium and completion ot the H-AJnerlcan attitude toward albers. Pea· R . brary II progreaalns well. It 1.1 tt.llend .,. of the United St.tes ... mo,. 10- P. L. C. Now as l}epartment of Printing; Ibat tho goal ot 'H�/OO will .. tern.tionally minded than they were at C II N I p · ' d C . reaehecl betore' the .04 or t.e 1ear. tb • • tact of Iht. con�lel, 0 ege ewspaper s . nnte on ampus An " _, .... .... mad, 10 Ihe eoo.

"We mUlt do some thipklng, lOme One ot the newer projeeta on the printed on that prell!. So now the col-real clear thinking on the luues of to- campua Is the P. L. C. Department ot le"e paper Is printed on the campus, day," Rauge continued. He cited e:r- Printing. Under tbe direction of Mr. Mr. Beard's next project Is to purehaSfl!

tennlal Planulna CommiJalon ot the N_L.C.A. for a gift of UO,OOO.

am pies of the attitudes of men In Italy Elmer Beard this .department atarted a linotype maehlne. Contract Let to Improve to show tbe mental rehabilitation that modestly about & year ago In a room' Now the" Beards work full u�' In Old Mal. Heatl .. , Sy.te. must take place, There must be more In the southeast corner of the basement the PLC shop and are kept very b sy. Priority has been received trom the understanding between the peoples o_f of Old Main. Today It la housed In more In ' addition to the college printing ey WPB to rebuild the heating system In tbta world regarding one anotber's spacious quarters In the balement of do work for churches, organl;atlons �d Old Malo.. The eontract was let last problems and situations. the chapel and la equipped to turn out Individuals. They recently PUblls}r., a week and work wllI begin at once. THINK AHEAD all types of printing. book of poetry for a Parklarld �ard." Tbe present unlta will be used; and

"We muet think of what lIee ahead," Mr. Beard and hie wife etarted out This semester a new course waa the present system will be ebanged Into wtrned. Maj. Rauge; and he briefly out- doing work on a job press In their spare added to the curriculum, Printing 57, a circulating system Instead of one way lined a three·fold program which he telt time and In tbe evenings atter work. taught by Mr. Beard. as It Is now. Tbere wll1 be a return must be tollowed in rehabilitating our At that time Mr. Beard wae employed PLC's Beard has visions of his baby. pipe on every radiator In the bUIlding. world. '�t, we must give the rest of by the Pioneer Printing Co. In Tacoma. the Department ot Printing, growing This will result In more even beat In the world economic ald. He admitted They bought out a printer who had a Into a large department of journalistic the rooms and will reduce present heat-that there 'are many problems connected lot ot good equipment and type fues and printing training. More courses In Ing eosts.

.

with stich a J)f'OlJ1'8m, but he Instated It for Job printing. printing will be added to the curriculum Thla heating system will also be In-must be done. Secon'dly, we must belp NEW PRESS in the future and It Is highly possible stalled In the two top stories o� tbe the rest ot the ·world In 8ettl�g up ed.u· Then recently Mr. Beard purchued In the not too dlatant future that skllled bl;lUdlng which are as yet unftnished .. catlonal prOP'8.ms. ThirdlY, we must a flne: modern !.Ilehle preas. This, of printers will be graduating from PLC. Nothing will be done to tbe heating help others with .thetr governmental course, neceultated mlffng Into l"rger This l.s one subject that returning vet· plant as one or the goals of the Golden problems: and that dOesn't mean tha.t Quarters. Thl.s ISBue of the "Mooring arans will be Interested In, feels Mr. Jubilee 1.1 tbe building ot a new heat·

(Continued on Pace Two) Mast," as was tbe 1ut one, Is being Beard.. , Ing plant.

PAGE TWO PACIFIC LUTHERAN COLLEGE February 22, 1945

T H E M O O R I N G M AST Gladiators in Service Write REUNION STORY (Continued from Page On'e)

we force tbe American syalem them.

Publlehed every t"'·o ""eeka during the achool year by studentl'l of Paclftc Lutheran College.

Office: Room 130 Telephone: GRanite 86 11 Subscription prlce---U.OO per year Entere-d all secoud elai8 matter.-Octooor 2. 1945. at the

Post Orrice at Parkland. Waehlngton. under the Act or March 3. 18i9.

Regarding Their Experiences By IRENE HAGENESS

There are now 372 blue stara on the P. _L. C. serviCe Hag which hangs In the hall of Old Main. These alumni in eervlce. many ot thew thousanda of wiles away, think about many thing! back home.. and from their many leUers com·

upon

In cla.lnl 'Oe aald that we muet de­vote our Uvea 10 touching tbe heartl'l ot men at home and abroad 80 that their lives will be· dlft'erent. BA,NQ1JIr."T PROGRA.'f

� S� 1lI� 7"," 7iMe4/ ��:u�:�:

.

way, It Is sure that P. L. C. Is often In their Milton Neavlg, '35. aluwni associa­tion preeeident, presided over tbe ban­quel &8 toutmuler. Dr. S. C. Eaatvold. AJ""_.J J_ .... J "'" The Mooring Mast. sent regularly to every alumnus In � "., .. vltt4t."","-tJ ,..,� service, la especially appreciated. Also welcome in every college president, gave a greeting to the

p,.t. Marvin S. Shaw, ex '43, Is oow at Madigan General corner of tbe globe wen' the Christmas greetings carrylna: alumni on behalf of the .chool and went Hospital at Fort Lewis after being wounded three dlft'erent faculty autographs and names of P. L. C. etaff members. A �:g

t:�:�

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Jects be· Urnes tn o,'ene&8 combat. He wu firet wounded at Cuelno. let ter tram Dr. Eaetvold. urging service men and women

The elu. ot '45 was welcomed Into Recuperating tram that he went in on the Anzlo beachhead whoee education had been loterrupted by tbe war to ra- the Alumni aseoclatlon. and Mildred where he was wounded again. He atormed &abore with tbe turn to P. L. C. and describing some of tbe 1'eeent Improve·

Broadland Martin, claas president. re. Invaalon forces In southeran France and '111'&8 wounded the menlB on the campus. also received enthullutlc response. aponded. She etated that ftfly-.lx or the

third time near DUon. This time he waa wounded twice, In " Am looking for ...... ard to a blgge1' 'and better P. L. C. men who started out In their clua four the leg and in the elbow. after the war." writes .\.llan O"erland, ARM 3/c. Fleet Air

years &&:0 are no� In Service. :-'Ian- Is reco.\·erlng quite well from his ...... ounde and ex· Wing 17 Hedron. c/o F. P. O .. San Franc",co, when be eent

Muelc for the affair Waf! furnlebed by pects to be out or the hoepltal In a rew months. He hopes a contribution to the Development As.oclatlon.

undergra.duates. Marion Salt man. ac-to e;�:� ���C;e!:h�:: �!�:�:C:��I�::�

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r!::.� =�o:t I�:: companied by Francelle Schoch, eang

ten on!rseas. Many of hie poeme have been published In nntll I can get back again." eays Opt Merle R. Pflueger. ��a:::c:�:el:::�ob:

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c/o P. M .. Quartet are Betty Lo u Rieke. Albert soldiers overseae should be published ; and he euggested a poem of Sha ..... ·s ...... hlch he felt should head the list.

Following Is one of his recent poems:

LAW I N MY lLU�."DS These two poor futile hands of mine areu't etrong, For they are thin. reflective. pale and long; Ten fingers made to hold a dreamer'e pen. Ten servants mAde to grace a poet's den. At first theee hands of mine could find 110 s .. nse In acts of dirt and hate and violence. Full fllclle in the art of word's allure; The battle's duty found them slow. unsure. :\nri though I'm sure they'll never hal'e the skill I n handling things designed to maim or kill. These two weak tools are pledged a Job to do They're pledged to champion the good and true. These hands are dedIcated to the cause Of punishment for breakers of the la ..... s. Of fre�doru and equality of lands. And for this, the law was placed Into my bands.

'I< 'I< 'I< -' \Ve wbh to ('-:IOprt·s� our hcartf{'lt sympathy to Mus Grace BloomquJsl. »t'Rn 01 "·omen. whose moth{'r �d awa) Thunda)', Feb. lIS. In "'Ruban, MinnesotA. Funeral ser\'ke-s were conducted �foncia)·. Feb. 19. 1< 'I< 'I< ALUMNI SECY. HAGENESS LISTS GRADS WHO HAYE PAID DUES SINCE LAST ISSUE

Cadet-Mldehipman Charles Cvetlch, '43, U. S. Merchant Marine Academy. Kings Point. N. Y.; Lyell C. Kreidler '29. and Mrs. Lyell C. Kreidler (Louise Jackson ) . '35 2727 Lemons Beach R d . . T'lcoma 6; Janet Hauge. ' 4 2 Parkland ; Pfc. Walter Goplerud. '38. Co. E. 359th Inf Reg!. . APO 90. c/o p. M., New York; Helen Church. '43 527 W. Pioneer. Puyallup; Mrs. Chaa. K i n g (Teresa Sells) '36 , 2818 Fir St .. Longview; Oak Otness, ' 4 0 . and Mrs. Oak Otness ( V ivian Smith). '39. 1412 1h So. L St. , Tacoma 3 ; Mrs. Ella DumaR. '41. 6121 So. K S t . . Tacoma; Mrs. Edgar OttInger (Merrie Malcolm) . '40. 5412 So. J St .• Tacoma 8 ; Vivian C. Pearson. '4-3, R. 3 , B. 1101, Everett; JosephIne Demers, '39. 221 So. 96th St., Tacoma.

Ensign SterUng R. Harsbmann, '43, U. S. S. New Or leaoe, Fleet Post Office. San F'rancII'lCO; Mrs. Sterling Harsh mann (Vernita Spooner), '40, 1802 So. J St., Tacoma 6 ; Mrs. Carl O. Skov (Thora RasmU68en) , '31, 263 N. Broad­way, Portland 12 , Ore.; Mrs. Rolfe E. Anderson (Helen Collins ) . '33. c/o U. B. F. B .• Hebo, Ore.; Paul Larson, '38 and Mrs. Paul La1'son, '41, Parkland; Edward C. Pedersen '41, R. I, Cathlamel; Bernice Eklund, '41, Parkland; Mrs Gerbard Haakenson (Ruth Bull) , '26, R. 7. B. 399·A, Ta coma; Ensign Paul K. Preul'l, '35, U. S. B. Allendale, A.P.A 127, Fleet P. O., San Francisco, and Mrs. Paul K. Preus (Marte Wenberg) . '38, Parkland; Lt. Kenneth D. Anenson '37, 0·1644085, APO HIt, c/o P. M., New York; Marcus R. Stuen. '43, AS V·12 (S). USNR, 620 No. 14th, Milwau­kee, Wis.; Alalle FOS80, '41, 1018 20th St., Anacortes; Patricia Roning, '42, Vancouver. Waab. ; Enalgn Waller Schnackenberg, '37; Myron Kreidler, '26, P&1'kland; Mrs Arthur Bloom (Anna Sinland), ex PLA, Eaat Stanwood; Edgar R. Larson, '34, c/o Field Director, American Red CraBB, Camp Pendleton, Oceanside, Calif.

Ben Dable. ex '42, M. U. Sch. ot Medicine, Milwaukee 3 WI&..; Mrs. Al Good (Louise Hendrlckaon ) , '37, 411 So Iron, C��ralla; Sylvia. Johnson, '42. 1805 4th Ave. N. W. Puyallup; Ensign Ruesell Frye, '37; Mrs. Chalmers F Elliott (Evelyn }S:nlbbe) . '41, 3615 Eut B St., Tacoma; John Larsgaard. 'H, Lutber Theological Seminary, Como &. Luther Place, St. Paul, Minn.; Major Pb1llp E. Hauge (on leave In Parkland ) ; Gertrude Tlngelstad, '39, Park· land; Arnt Oyen, '27, Poulsbo; Harold·F. Gray, '31, R. 8 B. 694-D, Tacoma; Mrs. Lloyd Hauge jVlrginia Byers ) , '34 1301 E. 66th St.. 1'a.coma; Alberta SchmItz. '33, 4602 So G St., Tacoma; Mrs. Norris Mong (Margaret Wesl'lon) , '34

Kuhn and the aforemenUoned must· OSCAr Elmer Peterson, Ph. "I. 2/c. Malaria Control Unit. cl ana.

Navy 1 4 5 . FPO. San Francisco, saye. "Not long ago I as� Rhoda Hokenstad Young. '35, mem. sured Coach Olson that I would be back seeking my oid ber of the college faculty. led the dlnerll poeltlon on his football team ae eoon as the war endl'l. With In community lIinglng. Thelma Daniels God's help. I'm sure that day won't be too long In cowing." Wil lie. ' 3 6 . was at the piano.

Wrltee p.,·t .. HowlU'd H. Schmidt, 39209435. 190th Gen . SE.R\'ICE H.EPnEBEXTED HsptJ .. APO 887 . c/o P. M .• New York, "We're all looking Four service men and ..... omen were forward to the time when we can return to Pacific Lutheran I present In addition to Maj. Hauge. They College . . . and wlll be glad and proud to help build 8 are Pvt. Marl' Shaw (see story els8-­I

greater P. L. C . " I where ) ; SKI. Philip Norby, U S M C , vet.

I I,t. (jlo:) "Chuck" FflllstJ'om, executive officer aboard I eran of much overeea." duty aboard alr­I thp l'S::; P.C. 5 4 9 . ill a letter headed "At Sea" says. "The craft carriers and a troop transport; i Christmas greeting was armost like a \'Islt . . . . I can eee Pl't. Walter Young. home on an over-j that the 'old P. L. C. Spirit' prevails In war as In peace." seas furlough ; and Estber Norgaard . Also referring to the facuity Christmas card. S/Sgt. Ro), cadet nurse at Harborvlew In Seattle.

St'hmAlult. HQ. 459th BG ( H V ) APO 520, NAW York , reo-- Also present was Clifton nruland. re­marks. "It Is certainly a pleasure ror a person way orr In cent graduate .from Luther Seminary, _ _ _ _ _ _ to recell'e a note with such a sincere personal touch who ..... 11 1 enter the Na,·y · chaplaiucy

• that can bring back with Bueh "I\'ldness the happy days soon.

." ., .. ,� . . . 0 ... '",' ,. ' . _ .. '" ", .. . "' I'--�------�---'-�-' yeare on that campus In Parkland. can really appreciate what PLC haB to offer a Btudent above and beyond the BERGLAND HARDWARE CO. call or rundamental educational subjects. It's really that I 0648 .-i\(JlFfU old 'Famlly-Chrlstlan Spirit' . "

And from P,'1.. HaM'Y Soloos, I n t h e Philippines. "Yee. GU. 3780 of couree. you may be eure that I will be among the first to look forward to attending Dr. Pflueger's Bible coursee. Prof. Malmln's music classes. and so on down the line (but paper Is ecarce) . . Thank you deeply for all your prayers."

Pfe. Jay Zhnmennan, 39193558, Co. G. 390th Int., APO 98. c/o P. M .. San Francisco. says, "Now as [he year 1 9 4 5

comee Into Ylew. and although overseas, I have the hope of returning to PaclHc Lutheran In the future and continuing where I left off, sharing once again the flne fellowship and friendly atmosphere that I experienced during my time there."

S/Sgt.. Del.Juar KnudtsoJ'l wrote, "God has protected me on a great number of combat mlseIons made over the can· tinent, and I feel assured He will keep me safe unti l I have tlnlahed." (Word now comes that Delmar'S missions are complete, and that he will soon return to the United Statea.J Pfe. Charles V. Richter, now working In the M1lltary Intelligence office at Fort BUsa, Tex., after overseas duty. telis the Interesting news of his marriage during bls No-­vember furlougb to Mias Marjorie Hall of Tacoma. They are making their home at Fort BUaa.

Lt. Og) T. Oial Hagenees, stationed with the Director of Training at a Pacltlc base, ia becoming known as PLC "contact man" for & number of alumni who have been call· ing In bls particular uea. A miniature reunIon ODe week end Included Mo.MM SIc Simon Andel'8Ollo and EMfsna .. iIart}'" Doft', "Dick" La.ngt.on. "Bun," Thorpe, IJreaD � tin and Paul It. Pren8. Lt. lohn Stuen and EuIgn ''Orvtt Dahl were other recent "visitors." "

To the alumni ottice comea another cbange of addrel8: Capt. Walter R. Simonaon, 0·662185, 72nd F'tr. Sqdn., 2i8t F'tr. Gp., APO 86. c/o P. M., San Francisco, Calif.) ' � 4832 Ea. C St-., Tacoma; Mrs. James Phillips (Agnel'l To1'­vend) . '38, 29B H St., Vancouver. Wash.; Lt. Arnold W. KeUer. 0·503742, 132Sth A.A.F.B.U .• I.C.D., A.T.C., APO .89. clo P. M., New York; Mrs. Arnold W. Ketler (Mar· cella Frederick) , '41, 3305 No. 22nd, Tacoma; Novelle Nagel. '36. 1901 Jackaon, San Francisco; Helen Cunning­ham. '39. 186aquah; Carol Snyder. '39, 601 So. MeridIan, Puyallup; Paul Brlncken, '41 , Yelm; Eldon Anderson, '35, c/o Rayonler, Inc., Port Angeles ; Cpl. Paul BUed, '37. 39179004, Servo Co., 264th Inf., Camp Rucker, Ala.; Mrs. Roald Melver (Elsie Gunderson) . ex '40, Bothell; Mrs. Burnett Thompson (Ninl> Elde) . '26. OrUng; Sgt. PhIlip Norby. Marine Det., U. S. S. Gen . .0. H. Ernst, FPO, San Franciaco, Calif.

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Pebruary U. 1 9 4 5 PACIFIC LUTHERAN COLLEGE PAGE THR� Loggers Take Close SERVICE DIRECTORY I Commellcemut Will Ie Student Caution Fee C ba Til 29 �p1. Robe" R. So,de<, 1 9 11%727, ex Held on SUllday. May 27 T R f b' h R asa I t. ·28 '38, APO 94, c/o Pm., New York, N. Y. Graduation exerelses at P. L.C. have 0 e ur IS OOln

The" Collese ot Puget Sound buket- Chester J. Solie, eM 2ft:., '37, Hdqr. been moved ahead one week this sprIng. The Assoclaled StudenC7 Bod)' of 1 9 4 {-ball squad edged out the Lutetl by the Co .• Platoon I. 129t Batt., USNCB, c/o Commencement will take place at 3 : 30 .. 5 haa taken upon Itself the refurbish-close score of 29-28 in a crosa lown F.P.O., San Francisco, California. p. m., Sunday, May 27 , and Bacealau- Ing of the Student 8041 omee by pledg-ball game, Tuesday. Februa.ry t. rell.te wUl be the same day at 11 a m Ing tor thla purpoae the_ unuaed portion

The local squad made desperate at- Lt, 0&) Harry South.,,'orth, '32 , Tuc- Summer aeaslon registration la se; to� of this year', "caution tee," A r8801u-tempts to o\'ercome the small lead their son, Arizona.. Wednesday, June 1 3, The first term tlon to thla etrect was paaaed during tbe rival held throughout the game, and Jo"'rank D. Spear, Cox., ex '41 , 9th Sp. ends Friday, July 13. The second term Student Body meeting, Thursdar, Feb­were able to hold the CPS th's to no USNCB, Co. C, clo F.P.O., San Fran- begllns Monday, July 16 . and cloaes Au- ruary 1 5. polnta in the tourth and tinal period, cisco, California. gust 1 5. Couraes will be otr6l'ed In all Agnes Mykland, ASB pr6JI:Y, informs

The first half proyed the downfall James Steel. ex ' 41 . )4 8 Med. Bn. , deparupents. us that the walla of the new Student for the "Glads," with the CPS t5am 35th Regiment, Ft. Lewis, Washington. The practice begun last year or In- Body otrlce (one door north at the Dook. going ahead to a 24 to 14 halftime lead. I Lester W. Storaasll, S llc, ex 'H . "Itlng atudenlH who expect to complete Store) will be of knotty pine, and that. Chuck Brown, basket driving center In USS Dobbins, A D 3, Dl.v. I , c/o F.P.O., requirements tor the B. A. degree at a rug almllar to the one In the mualc CPS, collected. 8 polnta In the first balf, San Francisco, Calltornla. the close or the summer ae8slon to par- studio wUl be ordered soon, Otrlce [ur­and all of the opponont.' Korea In tho Mary Elizabeth Stuen, E l/c, ex '42 , tlclpate In Commencement exere.illes nlture will add a bualneaa touob to the iast half. He led the ,·Isltor! with 13 Sp. (S> . Adm. and Mil, Comma.nd, e\'en though not In attendance during place, A alh'er plaque stating that this points as against 12 for Erl Nordeng, CSNR Repair Base, Work Barracks, San the regular school year la also being room waa ref!.nlahed by the Student local high pOint man. Diego. Camornla. followed thla spring. A number of Dody of 1 9 4 4-45 ·,,'111 be placed on the

The last hal! was a "thriller" with I Edward N. S"lnth, '36. alumni ha"e already made. applI�atlons door. Work on the room will start plenty of action from the starting S. O. Swanson, S l/c. ex '4 0 . 3Hh Sp. tor graduation upon this basla. ,,-Hhln tile next tew weeka. whistle to the end. with the Viking n\'6 Batt .. Co. C, PL 2. F.P.O .. San Fran- I The pledging of the Caution Fee Is outscorlng and outplaying the Loggers. cisco, CalHornla. Pacific Lutheran Host to I on a voluntary bula for each student. The final seconds of play found the :\tllton Theno, ex '42 , N.A.S., San I LSA Area Conference I �:::r�b:��;:

s::

t:t!:��ec��:g

I�h�

h:lregdege:� ;:�:�, town rival stili leading with ant: DI

�!��O�dal

��r;�:rpe, S 2/c ( FC ) , ' 44

Students from the Central Washlng- A number of solicitors tor each clD.1S8 38 70234 . 1.:.S.S. Dashiell, D.D. 659: tolll College of Education and tbe unl- I are helping to get the pledges In during

Jasper Johnson, '36 . Is principal or F.P.O., San Francisco. Calif. ;'I�:SII��a�t 1.���:�I:���:g �

'�:e Agr::

st�o:� Ithls week.

{he- Cnlon Gap Scllool near Yakima. He l FlO John B. Wall (T22 4 3 1 8 ) , '40 , -------<!olso owns a fruit ranch near Yakima. 1333 AA}" BU, ICO-ATC, A.P.O. 629, ::

rden

��: Saturday and Sunday, Feb. 1 0 Pre�. Ea�tyold Yisitin, • • • I cIa Pm .. �ew York. "Faith of Our Fathers" was the Cahfornla Conqreqatlons Oaten Ellasen, '35 , Is enlll\oYed by I Lt. J.eonard Wes�on, '34 Merchant I C E d 1 t . theme of the conference. Miss Betty Dr. S. . ast\'ol ell last week or the :'\ordby Supply Company. a fisher- :\farloe, 5 602·46th S. W . . Seattle, Wasil. Garton. :\atlollal L.S.A. ad\'lsor, spoke , an extended trip to Callrornla In the men's supri)' concern, In Seattle. I Emory Nelaon Whitaker, '34, all ":'Ily Place In the Church" during I Interests at the college and the Golden • I Stanley S. Whitehead, S 2 , C, '4 2 , lhe Sunday afternoon meeting. Re" . Jubilee campaign. Corrine FOltso. ' 44 . and Alal le Fossa, I Brks. I IF, USNTC, Camp Scott, O.G. (' .. Clar(:uce Johnson. Tacoma, answered \,ast Sunday he preached In Firat �::� ::�o��a��lnl�ell� the same elemen- Farragut. Idaho. the que!ltion. "Whither Our Lutberan ' Norwegian I.utheran Church, Re-v. R.

cortes. home town . Ana- Grant Whitley. S 2/c, ex ' 4 4 . B-3. Church ? " on Saturday evening. Mh!S I G . Ho"land . I)astor. In San Francisco. Drk� 6 1 2 t:pper Port Service Schools Ruth Elllngsberg, regional l)reSldent , : During tbls week he Is visiting melH-" 1' l"S�TS. Great Lakes. illinois. I bers at the congregation soliciting gifts

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r� Lt, Frank E. Willard. ' 3 4 , Army. Ilr���

nte�

the �sh

�am talk.

T [or the &chool. :\'1. Walter E. YO:lllg. 39 4 i 2 0 8 9 , '33 , ele'{'t:� toet��tell:t t��� ��Io�:al \�l';et�'I�; 1 Sunday, "�eb. 25th. he will preach In 9 6 � HAM Ord Co., ,"art Jackson. South I " , C li O S Our Savlor's Lutheran Church In Los t Carolina.

, � �:\\' . :�;:. :;. an�\8: aturday and Sun- Angeles where Rev. J. W. Carlson Is t William E. Zler; 34 , ' acting pastor. The next Sunday he

nerl :\!)-hre, '36 , principal of Jetrer- I plans to be In Longbeach In the con-I V·lctor'S Market son School In Tacoma. I� alAn director gregation ;'1 �e�. A'\l

1tL N;IS�

. Then or the Gault Recreation Program. This on March t e � I be n aaadena

• GKOCEIUES :\lEATS . under the auaplces of the Tacoma Rec- tlon to visiting members or the congre-I ' lULD STORAGE LOCKERS is held In the evening!! at Gault Bchool In Rev, J. H. Berg s church. In addl-

DROOKD,\LE GR. 8538 �eat

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arts an era ts an area. The above schedule Is subject to

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Norman Westling, '34. Is principal of tbe Broadway School In suburban Yaki­ma. Washington. Recently he wall elect­ed aecretary ot Central Lutberan Church, Yakima, where Roland Swan­son, '35, Is pastor.

BERGE'S Where the Elite Meet

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--------- ---

,.

- . .).. ." ., .. ......,.. -PAGE FOUR PACIFIC l.UTHERAN COLLEGE February 22. 1 9 4 5

Additions to P. L. C. Service Dintcto.., Doaald Abner. '38, Navy. I Euniee Knutson SK 3/c. ex '43, Wave Simon N. Anderson. ex ' 3 5 , ltO'M'M' 1 Bks D Treasure Isie San Francisco

Much Planning for Grad Banquet; Comparison of Costs Interesting

3/c. Dlv. 1 1 . A.G. 6 9 , U.S.S. Burias, Caltt. Putting on a P.kC. Reunion Ban- tabulating the lZl for rear or union dH-

Post Office. New York, N. Y. Lt. S-tse Marie Krlst-engeD, ' 3 8, NurB8. quet haM never been a. "cinch." but with tlculties.

Woodrow W. Arneson, ' 3 8 . F UC. E. 162 1 - 1 1th A'·e . . Seattle. Wasb. (Over- all kinds of shortages, ranging from An Interesting sraetlgHl 01\ tMe 1)an-Dlv .. l'SS South Dakota. F.P.O . . . San se&!!. ) butter to manpower. It becomes . job Quet la the eompart80n of this year'"

f''ranclsco. CaUf. I pre. Donald Langert. ' 4 1 . 1 9 0 2 2 6 5 5 , banquet coala with those of 1 934. Rec·

Karl A. Baehner, ' H , S. 2/C. Bks. 1 1 . 1 2618t Base Unit NASD. ATC. APO 3 9 6 . and a half during warllme. EVAn 80. ords show that 11 yea.rs ago 1 85 per·

R22E. NATTC. Memphis. Tennessee. e/o Pm .. New York. this year's banquet .... as an outstanding sons were served .... t1h a total food bil l

Pvt. Edw. Bergsagel. ·H. 394.79 7 1 6 . Douglas H. l..angert. S 2/c. ' 4 1 . USS success. ot U l . 7 2 ! Tickets sold for thlrty-nve Co. C. S.M.D.E.T. ( J ust transferred to Owens, clo Pm .. San Franclseo. Calif. One reason was tHat nearly everyone .eents. however. Instead of $ 1 . 5 0 . and

}<'ort Lewis. ) Roy Larson AS. ex '-15. Co. 45-2a. attending the reunion made reservation no doubt Instead ot turkey the chicken

Ensign Bertli BlIldt. '-12. 384056. USNTC. San otego 3 3 . Calif. either by postcard or telephone. Simp Ii-on tbe 1 9 3 4 menu. c08t1ng $1 1 .-10. wa�

USS PC-122 0 . clo Fleet Post Office. 1/Sgt. Stanley Lee. ex ' 3 9 . 1 9 0 7 5 2 7 0 . ereamed . Tbta year's turkey bill was

New York. N. Y. lSth .A.A.C.S .. APO 52S. clo Pm., New tying the necesl4ary planning which bad $ 72. 00. Cake came to $1 7 .00 . but $1 . 50

AlS Charles W. BllllnglfieJ. ex '.u. York. _ to be made by women ot tbe Trlntty did It In 1934. Celery .... &.1\ $ 6. 75 a crate

392 1 S 661 , Sqdn C. F.L.E .. K.A.A.F.. Ensign Gaylon Marvin Linstrom. ex Guild clreles who conse1lted to eerve thlll year; In '84 tltty cents worth ot

Kingman. Ariz. ' 4 2 . 5 5 0 6 Asotin. Tacoma, Wash. the b.anq""lret meal. celery was used. and lettuce was n"e

ADDITIONAL GOLD STARS 1(J.t.�.t. Hugo S,,·an80n. ex '4 •. ,,'--� kllll� In plAfH'l crIUlh In "'lorida. .Jun(",

Ptc. loho Cra.lg ,JohoNOn. ex '-la, Irnlt hL'I Ute "'hen a tralW'port ·on

Another reasou was that a gO'od com- cents a. he&d. Six pounds of butter Wall

mlUee of alumni really did some hard bougbt in 'H for $i.5 6-and no pointK. work setting up tables and chair!! and Donated help was easy to get eleven doing the thankless clean-up Job. See-Ing Stan Dahl hauling chairs and tables

years ago-this year $25.00 .... as paid

whJch he WAIl �nger. WAIl tlnnk In �ovembeT-, 19-1.... -

p,.t. .\.h·ln IJol1\'lg, e.'( • ... 11. was kil1t"d In action tn llalr. J"uly 1 944. pte. Ror R. " di"lnlt"y. t"x '-1.'1. dit"d In ac-tlon in October. 19 ...... in t.he European thf'atH.

In his truck took many a Visiting to waitresses and helpers. alumnus back to the twenties and thlr- ;---__________ � ties. when Stan was offlelal hauler with l

Rorllitt'l' "Lundt". fiX '''2. w .... kHlt"f1 In ac-tion In "'ranet". �-on'lllbt>r. 19-14. his model-T wagon. Making up tbe COLLEGE HAIRCUTS

teamsters' and carrler'S group this time were Stan Willis. "Peanuts" Paul Lar- , A I I L A N D • It. • • I •

Earl Forrest Bryant. ex ' 4 1 . R.C.R.�.. Pvt. Earle H. MacCannell, 3 9 4 8 1 3 1 -1 . son. Carl Edwin Roosevelt (Cork) Col- C. R. MARSH Bomb Squad. 1 1 6 . F.P.O .. San Fran- ex '-15. Co. D. 1 -19th Tr. Bn., 90th tom. Joe Hanson and Kenny Jacobs. cisco. Calif. Training Reg .. Camp Hood. Texas. Stella Jacobs also got Kenny In on ":============�

Pvt. Vale Burger. ex ' 401 . A. S. N. Oliver Nelson �alley. S lie. ex '42, the decorating job. The result was a i 3 9 2 1 6 8 2 7. 252 7th Base unit . Sec. C- l . Armed Guard Center (Pacific ) . S. S. beautifully done banquet room. ex-South Plain Army .f1eld. Lubbock. Tex. Henry ,- Abbott . c/o F.P.O .. San Fran- tremely professional. except for the fact

Cpl Elmore S Burlngrud. ex ' -12 . cisco. CaUf that no bill tor !towers was presented. 3921 1 933, 3606 Ord. HA.\f Co .. A.P.O. Dalias Martin. ex '4-1. oR l/c. Heather bloom. pussywlllow and sword R6 c/o Postmaster. San Francisco . . prc. William C. Matteson. 3 2 5 2 2 9, ex fern were used on the tables. and also Calif. 1 4 1 . 1 9 2 0·-I6th Ave .. Seattle. Wash. catoneaster greenery. Assisting with

Wm. C. Capps. ' 38. Ph. :\f. 21c. Cub. Jordan Moe. ex ' -1 2 . c/o U. Blidt . . decorations and the many other last-

1 5G4. F.P.O . . San Francisco Calif Troy. Idaho. I minute hostess Jobs were Lillian Gul-

pre. C. A. Case 3920222'1 ex " 4 2 I John Rohert Moe. ex ·-:ta. Il:xson. Thelma Wilite and Gertrude Co. B, 16th A.I.B .. · 1 3th Armo'red Dlv.

· I Pv(. Billie Lou ROliRe Morgan. ex '401. Tlngelstad. As for Mise Nielsen her A.P.O. 2 63 . Camp Bowie Texas

. p,.t. Ru�sell H. Murray. ex ' -1 5 , double role of faculty alumni �epre-Carol Emel'son. WAVE. ex '-I� .

3 9482 i6(). Btry. C�31-8 . F.A.R.T . . Ft. sentative and member of one of the Jerroll Rolf Enge. ' 401 . S lIc, Bar- Sill. Oklahoma. Guild elrcle� let her In tor so many

DINNIIS AND FOUNTAIN SIIVICE

BLUE RUSTIC Mountain Highway

MEN'S CLOTHINCi Fu ..... I.... Hats. 5 ....

letland & Palagruti 928 Paoutc Avenue

Tacoma 2. Waablngton racks 30. N.A.T.T.C .. Class G-t 1 . See-

Herbert H. Nlenstedt. HA I/c. ex '" " working hours that we dare not risk

tlon D. Memphhl 1 5 . Tenn. -t:. S. Naval Hospital Starr. Oakland. I�:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;� Carl Albin Erickson. ex ' 4 3 . 9 1 9 WI\.

CatU I � bur A'-e .. PaeHIc Beach, San Diego. 2nd Lt. Lyle �yland. :\iarlnes. ex '-11 . Callt. Pvt Frank J. Pavia. 39217425. ex

2nd Lt. Edna May Erlck�on. N- ·H . Co. A. 33rd Batt . . 7 4 6 Reg .. Fort 7!HS72 . ex '40. 224th General Hospital. McClellan. Alabama. A.P.O. 1 7 3 2 1 . c/o Pm .. New York. Chaplain Henry Gerhardt pnueger. Lt Willys Folsom. ex ' 3 7. 1 1 9 A.A. ' 3 8 . CSNR. Office of the Chaplain. Navy C.S. Squadron. APO 726 . c/o Pm .. Se- Yard. Philadelphia.. Pennsylvania. attle. Wasb.

Lee H. Folsom. ex ' 4 5 . S l/c. Co. 208 U.S.N.T.C . . Great Lakes. III.

Dennis John Gallagher. ' 4 0 . R.F.D . . EatonvJlle. Wash.

Donald B. Gilbertson. s 2/c. ex ' 4 1 . V-7 Unit. Box 1 1 0 3 . Colgate university. Hamilton. N. Y.

Stan Gllje. ex ' 4 4 . S.S.·W.L. Thomp­son, c/n Fleet Pm .. San "Francisco. Calif.

Pvt. Lawrence Grenier. 3 9 1 ; 3 6 19 .

ex ' 3 9 . Battery A-HS. AAA (A.W.Bn. ) . APO 4 03 . clo Pm .. New York.

Ensign A. Fred Heany, ' 3 8 . DSNA. USS Albena. K. A. 9. clo FPO. San Franelsco. Callt.

Wesley Hillman. S Z/e. ex '44 . Co.

7 8 1 . O.G.V.. Bits. 1 3 . Camp 8eott. VSNTe. Farragut,' Idaho.

Jane C. Himes. '41. S 2 /c . Naval Air SlaUOD, Altorta, OregOD;

Ensign Paul K Preue. '35. U. S. S. Allendale. A.P.A. 127 . F.P.O .• San Francisco. California.

Pvt. Warner R. Quale, '30. 1005-11t h St .. Bismark. North Dakota.

Gerbard Rosin. ex ' 4 5 . Edwin E. Sandvig, Ph. M 3/c. ex ' 4 4 .

U.S.N. Hospital Stat!. Great Lakes. Ill. Ralph Harlow Schllll08 . Y 3/c. ex '40.

RS-PSNY. Bremerton, Waehlngton. Ensign W. C. Scbnackenber«. USNR.

'37. U.S.S. Oakland. clo F.P.O .• San Francisco. California.

Sigurd Sicurdeon. MarLnes. ex '41.

Paul Evans Smith, ex 'fO. Army.

OAKES APPAREL

921 �roadw., Tacoma

Lt. Frank J". Hitcbcock. ex ' 4 1 . ASN 0752494, 671st SQdn.. 390th Bomb Grp . • APO 569. clo Pm., New York.

Alvin F. Jacobs. ' 4 1 . 2669 East 19tb. :������������� Sbeepabead Bay. Brooklyn . N. Y. If Norman K. Jensen. ex ' 4 4 . 0-203 A.S.

U.S.NR .• Lyman Hall V-12 Unit. Waila Walla, Wasb.

Ensign Kenneth M. Johnson. ·U. VUla D'Eate US. USNTC, Miami. Flor­Ida.

Mrs. Frishies Bakery __ FOR "'INE BAKERY PRODUcts

7 1 0 So. 38th St. Phone GA. 759i

ALUMNI DUES - - $1.00 Clip out tbls coupon and send to: IRENE HAGENESS. Alumni Secretary.

Paelnc Lutbera.n College. Parkland. Washington

N�me... . ....... .......... ................ .... __ . ... __ ............... ____ ..... __

Yeer left PLC ___ .. __ . . . _. ___ .. ______ ____ .. __ ... _ .. __ ..... _ .. ______ . _____ . ___ . __ . __ . __ .. __ .. _____ . ____ ..

Address . .. ____ ... ................... __ .................... _ ........ ....... __ .. __ ...... . . . __ ___ ________ .

Amount Enclosed. Occup4tion ____ . __ ........ _ _ ........ __ .. __ ......... __ . __ ... _ _

4--·------ -�-,-,,-._ ,.. . . 2(.

Park land Hardware Ilcycl ••

Repair � P.rts P.I ......

'/' Block Eest of College

F�LL'S

. IHI OUNTAiN

- IATUIIS 722

Brdwy

"PH FUNEIAL HOME 5466 S. PUGE'l' SOUND

GArland 543'6

ANDEISON CiIOCIIIY Parkland. Wash. GR. 8560

SCHOOL SUPPLDIB and HOME RIDMEDIES

I.OOIlDoUl u.raa CO. Mountain Highway

BROOKDALE. WASH.

RAU'S Chicken Dinner

.....

Have Y our �ortrait Made the Mod�rn Way I Jf

MODERNE PORTRAIT STUDIO PHONI MAl. 5431

9TH end PACIFIC AVENUE

SlATE AT

THE ROLLER BOWL SOUTH TACOMA WAY

TACOMA

\

f

� r 'f"'� ' Ff' \fbo IS' J " the Dark

o Horse?

VOL. II

Fonner Instructor To R8Ioin Faculty

Mr. Unrell J. Satre will rejoin the taeult7 ot PLC ne:!t September as in­IItructor In Greek. Latin, and Hebrew. A teacber here In 19U, Mr. Satre left to attend Luther Theolo&tcsl Semloary, 81. P.ul, trom wbleb he waa graduated on Febroar7 1 .. 1 9 4 5. with a Bachelor of Tbeology deltee. At preMot Mr. Satre ia teaeblnl' Greek .t Luther Semi­nary and II allO workhtg tor tbe Pb. D. degree. which be expects to reeelTe from tbe University ot low. w-ttbln the preMnt year.

Born at Jewell . Iowa. on Jul7 1 3 , 1917, M r , Satre graduated trom Jewell HI«b Scbool In the spring ot 1934. From there he went to St. Olar Col­lege. Northfield, Mlnneeota. where he W&ll graduated wltb the A. B, degree In 1938.

Given a echolarshlp In claaslcal lansuagea. Mr. Satre entered lhe State University of Iowa In the tall of 1938. He waa granted tbe M. A. degree b y tbe univerllity In the euromer of 1939. and continued studying and teaching there for two more 7ean.

Mrs. S.tre Is the tormer Ellu.betb Dahl. a 1 9 4 0 graduate at PLC.

MARCH 9, 1945

"'W hnll ... ".,_ S.lected For Reflwl .... d .lSI OffIce

By tbe tlme the Mvorlnl M •• t l'oeil to (tteM, tbe Auoelated. Student Body Oflloe wtU be relnlabed ill knotty piDe, IIlmliar to otber rooms la the Old Maln.

A ruat-colored carpet w-ttb • plne cone dellgn haa been ordered. Walnut wood turnlture will lOOn be bouaht. wblcb will Include • duk, eight ofrlce chain and • maater ch&Jr. Drapee and a flllnl c.blnet ,,"II complete tbe fur-nuhln«s. -

The A. S. B. ot '404-'46 III ftolUlclng the refurblsblng tbrough the voluntary eurrendering ot tbe stUdents' "'.60 Caution Fee. To date, $4000 has been pled«ed. The ciau repreeentativel .re 10 cbarge of pledse eollection.

ASB suppllee W111 be kept In the ot­nee aad It will be open .t all tlmel tor tbe use of tbe Itudenu.

"i.e·ITES TO SH�U. . . 0 0

CLOTHES WITH RUSSIANS Paclfl.c LutberlUl College studeots and

faculty are responding to a call In be­

HiADS CARNivAL

DorotIt, Klemaa:t.. ASB .cbertblng manacer. bM " cIaarp ot the Saca C.rllh ..... on Mareh 18. Dot'oth,., who is • JlUUor In the c:ol� of Libenl Arw. c:omes from Walla W.lta. WMh.

haJf of the RU8llan War Relief drive to Lu.&..- Gr.ood W�-

. .... ....... l - .... ..:.- •

Page - 03

Noo

Saga Carnival �h� �oors at 7 Friday, March 16 9 ...... II •• To I. Cl1tw".d: Prize.. Food. fII. Otfer.d

In es:actly eight daYI the PLC Sag. Carnival, with top rating In de laxe eotertalnment, will be read1 tor the crowds ot IItudes and frlenda who are expected to be hammering on the gym doors long betore tbe opening boar of 7: 00, Frld.7 evaDinl, M.rch 16. Gen­eral Manager Dorothy Nleroan and a.­IIlstanlll are planDlnl an eY'8.Dlng luch as comall . but once a terro. AdmJ..eaton will be 15 cents at the door and 10

cents tor each booth ticket alld eollce. alon stand. A war bolld ..... will be cooducted by Poetmallter R07 Peterson, a prl%e going to the blcheat bU7er.

Program planner Ruth Towe Cuar­antees that you wttl enj07 "Informa­tion Pleaae;' the experta being none other th.n austere taeuU7 memben. whUe tbe contestanla will be our OWll sbare their OWIII clothe., not merely '5W �

dlsearded onM, with the uDfortunate Fro • . .:.. L _ brlSbt bo711 and stria. Other .ttraetlon.

war vlctlmll of Ruasla. The o1I'lclal c.m- m ...... mDOurg will Include a plano duet b7 the Gul-palgn Wall 011 from Februal"7 18 to 25, AmonI' tbe letten recelTed b7 the haugen alat,n. Rumohr .nd Graee

S . C I d but .. tbe relief eommlttee funeUonll '.culty in return tor thelr eoliecUTe Elaine, a skit by the men atudeDlII, aDd talrway omp ete tbrou«bout the year, P.L.C. wtll con- Chrlatmas greeting cardll to PLCltea In Ta'tlou. mu.leal Dumbe".

A new Iteel-relnforced concrete IItalr- Unue to eollect clothing for a few more the service was a lonl reminleeent one UISh spot of the ..,.enlnl wlU be tbe

"'J' on tbe Nortb ftet-ot-Old> lIU1t';-un- da7'· A� ot.. ftve pound, of, eJotblo. d.teUlHld Luxembourc. trom Laurence coron.UOD of the Sap quMA .. d kIAI. der construction &Jne. No.-ember 6 , has and one pair ot shoe. per penon has Grenier, ex '3'. t.ufOnC8 will be re- Elections tor ronlty w111 be held Wed­

Just been completed and work bas be- been let. The clothing may be old but membered by m.D7 gndJ for bla eev- neld.y, March 15.

gun on tbe South atalrw.7. At . coat ahould have at least alx montbs of wear eral 1Ie.IODS as .. atar pl.7er on tbe Arcbltectural Engineer har Plbl aad of $ 1 2.000 apiece, the stairways will to be worth the ahlpplng coat. . Dr. vanity eleven, and tor hll contrlbutlona hla cohorta will design .nd ereetl'bootba extend trom the buement of , the buUd- ROllnlng repreflenta the tacult7 In tbll (otten under tbe Joe Blow signature) wbere patrons m.y buy popcorn, throw Ing to the root, The doon are equipped drive alld Brita Skoog, tbe studenll. as a. teature writer on the Moonn&, dam; etc., etc.

witb a llpeel.al attachment wbleh w111 The clothlns obtaloed here U !Jent to Mut. Wltb a deflnlte nost.lslc flavor Going "all-out" tor the Sag. etrort keel> them open In case or fire. the coHeetlng alation In Tacom. , wbere he

.. �:�:�: bt�:

k I:!� :snd re&d tbe

.re tho tollowtn« commlttt .. : � One ot the Interesting teaturel ot tbe It la Inspeeted, prepared, and repaired -Rutb To.e, ch.lrm.n : Anna ADder-

construction work W'&8 the outllide ela- by Tolunteer worken. From there It Is latest Ique of the Mooring Mast was SOD .nd . Joan Satern. � ­,'ator tbat wall built, extending trom tent to Portland, Oregon, loaded onto one ot my tavorlte pas�lmes. In tbe Leta .nd Telm. Meuger, cb&1rmen; the «round floor to above the roof of Rnsa1an liMps. taken directly to the ea.lm meditation ot theee I.ter ye.n J Norene SkUbred, Arnold Towe. VerDon tbe building. A platform witb wbeel- U.S.S.R., arriving at Ita destination mull _dly ... y mY ltudles suffered coo- Berg, Don BUllnpley. CoD8trDetioIl ex .. barrowli ot «ment on It was pulled up within tour weeks atter leaving our IItden.bly beca:ue ot IIIlJ' bU8Itol atU- pett&--l .... r Plhl. eh.lnDan: .n ...... 1-and dowa by means ot a eable and a ehores. tude to the reet and rewaOon I galned able belpers; �� - Grace- El&1ae gasoline engine. A I II I In Oat manDer:' GulhauC8D. cba1rmaa: Alto. BJe.lm.. Ed

InformaJ dedlcac.ton of the lltairway SO"Ii�pm

O,a

;h:::�ognnaIU���;�

b�.�::� He writea, "Proteuor Ramatad waa Beradt. Vernon lin,tad., Bet17 Lou Rieke,

took place on Moaday, )larch 6, wltb Clothlnc Collection will bec1n April 1. a.n op�lmllUc old lIoul, and r trost ter· Enncellne Ahrendt, Rumohr Gulhau-

Student Body President As-nes Mykland 'fenn7 that he sUIl I.. In tbe early gen, Leta. and Telma )(etscer. BocJCD.-

In eftarp. :�UmCB ALL CAMERA FANS daYI of my ca�r at ,PLC \be prof..or Dorothea OfaL .. t. ..... - II ......

Contractors tor the coaatructlon work held hope'! tb.t eTeDtua1l7 I would .Car._ ... �..Dahl. ehaJrm_: Delta are Steiro- ud HaDaon ot Taeoma. The deadline tor turDlog In ana� le.rn algebra arid geometry. Four yean Barlllaart. Marll)'a .Jenkeu. .J . D •• t

¥ I

. . ... • . 1. . _ ahola for tbe Saga anapabot contest la l later he attll hOped, bot onl7 ...... ueI1. Haule, Sylrla BlomeUe. Alma Been.

BOYS EVACUAn:2iid FLOOR near. All ptcturee muat be de.-eloped placing mo.t ot hts faith tn mln.clea and Ona Stelro. Ad'l'tll"tllrlll - [np a?d turned In b7 , tb�, end �t th18 month. (Continued o� Pace Four) • -l0» ,,,,,,,. eba.tnn�: , �onD. SklIbre4.

Wttb conat.ructlon beginning on .the " , , ' . " _ " " � " ArJee.", Cord .. , .• ua. ClauueD. ADlla South stalnra7, It baa beeome neeEle- Je , e "h M . o· Or - T il " -'-l. ' 'rilt Notmalt AftM. IljeIM ...... ,. PaOon

�.: :,=:�e":'t:::::��';; =� . _�s 0 0 ���C' . · o ,er:. ,ra ��� �:..�.to lIett, s:.. ... .... Com.;

.bl. to m ..... ... or the mlddl . .... r- New Additions to rary Shelves .... 7. Dean Nelaon baa led tbe exodus . . ' , ot the 12 wanderers to tbelr new quar- Amoog the twelve lie. books about te not . to be. confu.aeci with t�e well- STATIONED IN· SOUTH ten on tbe ground floor, where the7 mualc purchued. lut week b7 tbe col- known .hiAtoriea.l. lra.T.l boo, of tbe lI&Jor Pbilip E. Baup. after '"D.d .. will make use or tbe old print MOP and lege library is • DOvel book, le...-tall .. me name _ritteD by FraIleQ Pa.rk- Ing a month at bome with hla famll1 the two rooml formerl7 occupied by the Mule. Written b7 A, Z. IdellOhn, It I. man.) PrimarU7 a Ju1d"'boo� , It, 18 and triends. lett Monday. February ZIJ. cooke. the !tnt comprehenll.-e stad7 ot Jewllh .Iso a blstory, told In FeOCtaPblC Be- to report tor duty tn South Carollna.

_______ .... __ .... _ ..... .., I mOlic In Eogllah. Deeerlptin In char- quenee, of the eovered ..... g0!'Ju{cTation While here. M.j. Haule apoke In

r acter, tbe book la an .nal)':lll oL.tbe ele- trom the Mlnourl River tothe Pa.cUlc. chapel and be ,...... tbe maln apeaker .t

Coming cvents �TURDAY. MARCH 1 0 - AWS­

IIponsored bowl1og party. 8:00 to 10: 30 at South Tacoma alley.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH H ........ Elec­tlone for, S&p ,�lng and Queen.

FRIDAY, MARCH 11--1945 Sap. Carnival at 7 : 00 p. m. In �I­lege gym. .

menu and cbara..:terlaUcs ot Jewlllh Of the two-hundred books eecured. b7 the Alumni Banquet. mu,lc In thelr blstorlcal denlopment the library department In tbe put two Hla present addreu 111 Major PbUlp from the earliest times of Its app$&r- montbs, half were presented to p.L.e. E. Hauge, 5Hth Air Se"lce Group, eo.." anee as a Semitic - Oriental ' 0 n g. aa gifts. Included In the donatlona la luumbla AAB Columbia, So. Carolloa. througbout the a,es and countries. a collection from W. P. Morga'D, tatber Written not only for tecbnlcal trained of our llbrary aut.tant, !Ire. Barofsk7. m1llIcians. , but for the intelligent lay Tbe group contaIns about fltty books. public &8 well, tbil book will be wel- the majority of wblcb .re about' Geol­comed. by the many music lovers at ogy. P .• L. C. Man7 boob were added to the 11-

Ooe of teo additional books pur- brary's colleet1on, ot chUdren·. lItera­chued. lut week fa 'l'be �IPOO TnIU ture. and Nortbweat and Sea'ndln&Tlan by the American Guide Series. (Thll hlltoq thll 7ear.

OHom GIVES OONCERT The Chotr of the Welt, under tbe di­

rection ot Prof. Gunnar J. Matroln. gaTe a concert at Annie Wrigbt Semln.17 last nlgbt. March 7. Among tbe new selectlonll sung W&8 "A Norwegian Re­Quiem," arr. by M.lmln, wltb A-nlt. Norman as aolollt.

l z 77= T7EP'

PAGE TWO P.A.CIFlC LUTHERAN COLLEGE March 1945

T H E M O O R I N G M A-ST Publlsbed every two week. durln& the Mbool ),ear by

students of PacUlc Luthert.n Collep. Lt. IIaI'o1d S. ean.on. "Swede," ex 'U, Is DOW ataUonecl Norman Je&.. Judd, ex '42, ma.rtled

Otrlce: Room 130 Tele.p.boDe: ORa.nlte 8611 Subscription prlce--$l.OO per year

Entered a!I seeond clurmatter, Oetobet' !. 19"5, at the Post Office at Parkland. Washington, under the Act of

Marcb 3, 1879.

with tbe armr &it corpl! "somewbere In the Marlanu," He Cpl. Kenoeth Dorman at Shelton, Wub�

.. rit,BII. "What are tbingll like back at PLC! I gUeM I'll lortOD, DeceID�r 11. She will gradu­

bave to WfU:e fm- lbe M'iSOflni '8"ist to ftnd out WUC cooks ��rr::ra!brD T::;::�

b��etAL ..HQ8lljLAI

EDITORI.U ST .. \F}' ::: ��::. t:::n:t�:

e'h:d 1I��:r:'�8

S A�

bdere:�� ��c

eH:;O�d

t�� The Hev. George H. Rustad. '37, 501

Carison, 0-771218 , 398 Bomb Sq .. 504 Bomb Gp . . A.P.O. �:�e:�w

A':��::�:�:�:y 4�ec���anr'; �"r CQ..KDlTORS _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ."--'"lTA STUEN, ALICE BRUDIE 247. c/o Postmaster, San Francisco. Caillornia

ASl'ioclate Editor _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Theodore Reitz Sports Reporter _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Walt KUDacbak ReporteMl: VIrginia un,1ck, Daphne Hellman, Helen Ander-

son, Ardys Bredvold, Thelma Metzger, Beryl Bergan, Anita Roth, Ruth Jobnson, Louise Tollfeldt,

Ad"!ser _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ MtS8 Ruth Franck BrSI�"ESS STAFF

BUSI�"EiS �f,'\.."'lAGER _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,DOROTHY l\"IE..\lAN

Assistant Manager Marian Butler

"I wish to express my thanks ror the caples of tbe MOOring Mast which 1 have been recelv'lng." "riles GAry Ptlueger. '38, son·of Dr. Pftueger, who Is in the uavy chap­laincy, "I must admit that I devour them thoroughly lfig-uraUvely, of course) . Any news from PLC, which to me sUll means home, Is thoughtfully pondered over, even the ads.." Address: Chaplain H. G. Pftueger, USNR, Office ot the Chaplain, Navy Yard. Philadelphia, Penn.

the Northern Union Conference of the Seventh Day Advenllst.ll.

Novelle Nagel, '36. J, 8tudylDC to be an ()(:cupatlonal thuaplst. She ltarted a four month course at Mill. College Feb. I, after the completion 'at whlc:h she will have eight montha' Internsblp In a �overnment hospitaL Her addreu Is Bo;( '98, Oakland, California.

Buslne8S Secretary _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Inga Jobnson Hal Votaw. year '36, tormer grid star, In a recent letter Catherine Morrow, '''', became the from the Philippine Islands, points out how the men out bride of T/Sgt. Chaa. (Chuck) L. Snel­there appreciate any piece ot -ruall that ar'rh'es, Hal has son. ex '''3, at a wedding held at Peace recently been transferred froUl New Guinea to the I-'hill1'- Lutheran Church In Portland, Feb. 16,

Ad-vertlslng Manager _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ...- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Corlnne Erickson Circulation _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ CeceIUa Oardlin Sen'lcemen's Clrculatlon _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _____ Annabelle Blrkestol Exchange _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ � _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Grace Blrk�toL pmes. In writing about �he people there he says. "the bap- with Rev, Hellman conducting the cere-Solicitors: Margie Carlson, Grace Gulhaugen , Rumohr Oul- pil!-ess and gratitude of the Filipino people upon t!'le ar- Ulony. Lois Ludwig, ' ..... was organist.

haugen, Jocelyn Lynne, Ruth Bjerkan, and Sylvia ril'al at Americans to theIr shores, cannot be expressed in Barbara Newton. Anita Roth, and Blomlle. words. I doubt If anyone will ever know how lhey worked Daphne Hellman, prellent students. at-

Anvlser _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _

_ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 0. J, Stuen and tought to rid the Japs froDl their land." Address : H. C. tended, The couple visited the campus

THE RED CROSS Votaw, C. sp., M. T B Base Navy 3100, E. p, 0., San shortly atter their wedding and then

ThIS week the 194'i Red Cross campaign was launched Francisco, California. ���r:�gt.

t���80�

r�: s�:t%:e!� "�h

e:;:,�

all over rhe country And in spite of our few dollars in the p,,·t. Walter F. \'Otlilg. husband at Mrs. Young, PLC will recel\'e �ddltlonal training on a. face of many needs, this appeal srill means US The need for women's athletic director, Is now somewhere overseas, Ad- hea\'y bomb�r there . .cenerous support IS ,cre.Her than ever �:���:�c·1�;�t,e:/�. :�:�I:!�t!�,

4�eO:

9y:r

6k�

t�.0�,�

. HAM

The Red Cros<, nrganization reaches e\'{"I)'V.·here, perform. JOg (l)untless tasks on the fi.chting fronts. and taking U\'er in Oscar Klmcr Peterson , ex ' 42 , plans to return to PLC

�IAXINE EKllEM was graduated in June, 1944 , trom Everett High Scbool.

It th t i t hi h d th Everett, Washington, and Is enrolled ("\·el)· mainr disaster at home �ra:

rsrer

eto �:: U� o�o::s�.

eto S�u�:Pin

o�:

r�e�::r :':Sherl:: in lhe College of Educatlon.a':

One of the innluable services that we hear much about Address O. E. Peterson, Ph, )1. 2/c, Malaria Control l'nit, Irr============= these Ja)'s is the sendin,!Z of packages to prisoner�of WH, �a\"y 1 4 5 , c/o F. P. O. , San Francisco, California. bnn,ein.c to them needed food and the spiriT of home.

Two former PLC "sidekicks" recently enlered the sen'-As the \\'ar draws to a successful conclusion. the Red Ice together, namely Hal Heitz and Skill :\'eH8. both ex " 3. Cross wi ll be burdened with the e\'en ,2n:ater responsIbilities of feedin)! :lnJ clothin.c The peoples of liberated countries

In rhe past rear, \\'e ha\'{' seen the Red Cross In anion in nur own country during storms and Roods. Even in Tacoma we have had a tt('enr demonstration {)f Its helpful.acti"" iry durin,c (he Maehir apartments tra,1!edy.

Here at PLC we should remember the boys from our own classes who arc ",l!hrin,l! in our behalf and who need our co­operarton: let liS di� down a little deeper into {)ur p<Xkets�

They joined tbe United States Coast and Geodetic SUT\'ey and are stationed on one of the navy's smaller vessels In Seattle Hal was a medical discharge from the army a couple of years ago, Both he and Skip will be sent to un­known points soon,

Stanley Ariton, ex '43 , who is a radio operator in the signal service, visited in Parkland tbe !ast week in Feb­ruary. He has been stationed at Camp Crowder, Missouri, but will be sent "over" soon.

Pfc. Harry Soloos. who has been on the Islands or Leyte

The Strawberry Blond and Man of the Hour

BOB LARSON for

SAGA KING

U U U WORDS OF THE WISE and Samar. has been transferred to a hospital in the Nether- ,-�--�---------.

The faculty, like rhe poor. are always wirh us : so arc theit �;:::po��s�o ����

e�o:;�t:�

s:ft:

tr �1::::ion

H�n :

a�0:;i7:l :�

favorice expressions Dr Alcorn extends a fellow.sufferer Leyte. Address: Ptc, Harry SoI00s-19113939, Pat. Det sympathy in the familiar, "I know that's a large dose but if Wd 27 , 132 Gen. Hosp., A, P. O. 920, c/o Postmaster, San I can stand it, you can roo." It's all in The subtleties of the Francisco, ealltornla.

BERGLAND HARDWARE CO.

0048 PACIFIC

GR. 3780

language, of course, but Mr. Franck's "Murtonhead," and Dr. PLC's fi1'8t semester math "wlz" this year, Lee Folsom, ':============� Ranson's "H.m.m.m,m." seem to add up to (he same thing, is at the Great Lakes Na"'al Center. Lee wonders It our r Dr. Pflueger's admonition, "Don't chrow rhe baby out with basketball team Is still existing atter losing several of Its the bath water. " should surely be taken by PLCites by now members to the fighting torces. Address: Lee Folsom, S as sound advice. Mrs. Holstad expects complete compliance l/C, Co. 208, USNTC, Great Lakes, illinois. Lundberg Drug

11830 PACIFIC AVE. PHONE OR. 8519

wirh her, "Won't we, girls?" Mrs. Young's "All righe, girls," prc. Martin "Marty" It. Gulhaugen. who was stationed IS also directed toward' the feminine cooperation, But does in Italy for some time, is now in France In the field artll­Miss Rcneau really expect an affirmative answer when she lery. Marty reports that he has been In the city ot Strass-

asks her psychology class, "Do you understand?" And the �:t�:�'t���::���rsH�:r��

feH�i:�!�p;:�

I�:'a�C:�;

dt!:� r:o; I�============:::! WbeD, lou' WaaK oUIee .� end of almost anything is Mrs. Franck's absolure, "Well. so every other day when he is ott duty. On duty be spends bia

much for rhat." nights In a culvert under a highway, His sleeping Quarters * '* '* to date have Included "ditches, hay-lotts, dug-outa, tents,

HUMPTY.DUMPERS and what have you." Address: Pfc. Martio R. Gulbaugen. BtI')' B., 19Hb F. A. Bn,. APO 7,58, c/o J?olllmaster, New :York, N. Y. : • . ,

If you are a dorm Srudenc. you fall in one of twO cate. gories; chose whose beds a� dumped or those who dump beds. Possibly 'you have a dual personaJiry and belong ta: both In a letter to �'Baron" and Mr8. Barotaky. Sgt. Paul

classes. ·PoUllo; 191'46997, Det. ot Patlentll, 01211 U. S., Army Raptl. Plant, APO 871 A, c/o P. M" New York, N. y" writing

The bed dumping contingent may be subdivided and clas. from a hospital in England where he Is being treated t,or sified, There are those who dump simply because it creares a wounds received a second time, says, "Tell Baron It lo6�8 disturbance. And rhere are the eye_for.an_eyers who might all If we're In the tourth quarter ot the 'football game'."

C. FRED. CHRISTENS.N , . STATlO'!"lIR

(Rosenburgll) , 913 Pacific Ave, BR. H29

1111111111111111 BUCKLEY- KING

FUNERAL SERVICE • 104 Tacuma Av/!. BrJ .. y. � 166

I II II II I I II i I II II 1111 I II II be seeding accounts with the rival who copped a covered date. Don Gilbertson sends a. new address: Donald B. Gllber�. Boys often use bed dumping as an excuse to invade The Fo(_ SOD, AlS, USNR Midshipmen's School, Seet. 35, Not�e Dam,. bidden Premise. Girls have the same idea in mind when they Indiana, and sends greetlns to everyone at PLC. - ' , P--=-====-==-Ot;! im'ade the Lower Regions whcre they carefully observe any femininc photographs adorning rhe walls.

Thc victims of bed_dumping come under different head_ ings too. If you are ornery, your bed will be dumped by way of punishment; if you are Mother's little darling, your bed will be dumped with malice aforethought, for the good of }'our soul; if you are an average good_natured person, your bed still will be dumped on the general theory chat you're a good sport and can take a joke.

At P. L C. bed_dumping is a tradition, Dumper or dumpee, you'd better take ic on (he chin! !

Cpl. Laura HAuge. A 90968", WAC Det. Base G, APO 565, San Francisco, sent the following greeting to the alumni at reunion: "Although thousands of miles away, my thoughts are with you today. I am now working with the Signal Corps, and do enjoy the work. Life In the tropics has been Interesting. Recently 1 visited one of the native villages-the highlight ot Oul' visit was a ride in ODe o f their outriggers.

Other recent letters are tram Sgt. Arnold S. 01800. and I�tc. Robert R. �l&rt1n. both "Somewhere In Belgium," from Prt . . "-rtbur G. �u. in Georgia, from Cpt ��atban Fuhr overseas. probably In France:

STOP AT

YEll!])I?) for DeliciOll' HambMrg ...

Hot Dag. Jumbo MII ...... k ••

"Tench Frlee at

9th a.d Pacific

I

" .... h 8 , 1 9 ..

0A.'«PU8 DBVOTIONS Loraine Punta 1M In devotionll at

a meeting at tbe Cam PUll Devotional Group Tbursday. Feb. 22, In the Recep­tion room_ A yoca.l selection, "But the Lord Is Mlndtul at HIli Own." Wall lIung by Atton Hjelm.

PACIFIC , n�u,o COL CEOE

Th. 8 .. 1" -Trud ... A,al" Peace Over Pacific P .. OJ: THRill:

ME,SSI�H utrH'S Twenty�lwo atudente earned placell In a rough and tumble game with 'DE�EATED' .,. '21 on the tint aemellter honor roll, the

fouls numeroull on both sidell. the Peace r • � regtetTar'., office dlaeiosea. Leading the Wlnnto& their .«ond sawe In a8 lI.11t 18 Betty Lou· Rieke, (reBbman In Lut��an Qulntel defeated PLC by a many dalB, the Lut:. took. the long eud Uberal Arta. who achieved a atralght ���:;:r:

fto:

1 t�: \'���r�

e!�r:�. ��;��nr� or a 3 0 to 21 score a�alDBt the Mea·

A ;�:

r��

e'".omen And 5 men Ulaklng a

with 2 4 points, C. Riggen with 1 9. ��Il�h!�u���a

g�;h

oU:C;

e��:�.

O�::C:=II�

rro�O����J�a IH�;���l�:I, g��:�:: 2 . 2 5 or better grade average are the :��h g���

netre�

a�9

t�:u��

e�8�as Nordlnl!.. slah the made a game of It all the wa.y.

Montana. In 1941 . She 11'1 a treshman tollowing: PLC (42 (5t) Pe.ce Lutheran ���c1:'�n�

h;'�:

II�!I:

n;e��I;o;:r!

la:e��; and la taklDg a bUsIDe8s coul"8e. Belt)' Lou Rieke -------------- 3 . 0 0 Lo

R'"d',d'k

O'" (' ,' ,' _

_

-

_-_

-_

F,

;.-

_-

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"(,!,' E,', RR"g.g

ge.,,'. matcbed, making the galUe an ioter-Marjorie EdghUI _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2 . 8 9 .. •

Maxine Strand wold _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ 2. 8 4 Nordeng ( 1 9 ) ___ C. ___ ( 3 ) R. Riggen �S��g(;::;;

to wa:�I�.) Me8HlAh Lllthcr&n

TH E

D A H L of the

C A M P U S For the best of

them all Yote for Lois Dahl

S E L D E N ' S First in Floor Coverings

OCCASIONAL F URNITURE

UNOLilUM - RUGS SHADES BEDDIr\G

DRAPERIES

9UALITY KNITYING co.

93. COMMERCE

lA TMOND ELEC:TRIC: C:O_

8 1 :l P ACIF'lC AVE!'oo'UE BRdwy 1 7 1 2

Grace Elaine Oulhaugen _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2 . 8 2 Jaeeh ( 9 ) _ _ _ _ _ _ 0 . _ _ _ ( 3 ) A . Bennett Redlske ________ F ____ ( 7 ) Bryoeatad ��I�erBJ�:�:�h��

-============= � ::! P

I�:lb�:I:U;;I'I�-P�-T���e� ) p��c:

I����� Nordeng t l " I ___ 1-'- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Jounson

Alice Brudle _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2 . 76 eran: R. Wilhelm. Berndt ( 6 ) _____ C _ _ _ _ _ _ _ \ 2 J Marclk

I ����h

( � : ) _ ======�==-\-.-)-��::ab�::lleaou� Warren Jaech _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2 . 6 9 Telma Metzger _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2 . 6 9 Joan Satern _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2 . 6 7 RUll\ohr Gulhaugen _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2 . 5 6 Theodore Reitz _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2.56 Etta Claus!'Oen ________ � _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2 . 5 0

Gladiators Defeat Substitutes PLC: Logsdon \ 5 1 , 1 Heuchert . Towe. Beq;. Mellslah-Be-Immanuel Lutheran , ...

The Lutes �ot back on the \'Iclory I "'alter C. DaUlrau _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2 . 5 0 trail with a vengeance as they out- A A Eunice Ton-end _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2 . 5 0 scored the Immanuel Lutheran church I �Itte 4"el44ie4 Robert l..arson _ _ _ _ � _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ � � _ 2 . 3 8 Onl all the way to win an easy 65 to Jean Lovyold _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ________ 2 . 3 8 2 6 \'Ictory on "'eb. 2 3. Nordeng or PLC Team 1 . led by sharpshooter Loralue Carol Elets'}n _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ � _ _ _ _ _ 2 . 3 3 went on a scoring spree to garner a Purvis. defeated team 2 by a lI('ore of Nora KJesbu . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2 . 3 3 total of 31 poInts for the contest. 2 3- 2 2 In the third game ot tbp W.A.t\ . Lois Penlnnl _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2 . 3 3 PLC (6:"0) (:01:6) Immanuel Lutherall basketball tournamellt Feb. 27 Team E"angeline Ahrendt _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2.3 1 Hedlske t 3 1 _��� F _ _ _ _ _ ( 1 0 ) l\'ersen i 1 led at the Quarter with 7-0 but two Grace Birkestoi _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 2 . 2 5 Kordeng ( 3 1 ) � � �F _ _ _ _ _ _ ( 2 ) namese l' bRSket8 by t\llce K",aland and rt free

Berndt ( 1 3 ) ____ C� ____ ( 4 ) Ander�on throw by �larlat1 Knutsen hroughl the Japch ( 5 ) _ _ _ _ _ _ G ______ ( 3 ) ,\Idrlch !leore to !l·5 at lhe half. fl was touch

I:.. Pllil ( 2 ) _ _ _ _ _ _ �G ___ �� _ _ ( 3 ) Nes\'lg and ,l!O 'rom there w!th leam 1 leadIng. uaano DuDS Substitutes: PLC: Logsdon ( 8 ) . Towe 1 1 5-1 3 . at the end or Ihe third QUluter

JOJ NV3G

Victori-s Market OOLD STORAGE LOC!K.ERS • lIlW<--"KRlES

BROOKDALE �{E-'TS •

OR. 8 5 3 8

C. O. Lynn Co. 71.

TAOOM .. \ AVE.

MORl UARY Phon. ,,-"in 7745

( 3 ) . Berg. Hellchert. Immanuel and pmerglng the \·Ictors. Loraine Pur-MarIk ( 2 ) . Kettler ( 2 ) . I \'I!! was high with 1 9 polnls tor team 1 ! and AI\{'(' Knaland tor team 2 with 1 5 .. , D . H. I Team 1 wall captaIned by Ruth Pflueger

�flss �lat!\da Boe. parIsh worker at ' all(\ team 2 by AIi('e Kaaland. Dethlehem Lutheran Church In Tacoma, The girls on the teaml'l were chosen was �Ilest speaker at an L.D.R. meeting ; by the W. A. A Cabinet !o parllcipate held Fell. 21 at the hOl1l� or Mr. and ' In Ihe tOllrnlllllcnt. All baskethall games Mr!<. E. TlngleBtad Her subject WRS ha\'e been rerereed by Lois Tollteldt. rarlsh work. I , { 'H,' _.- QI· ()T-a,:,. ... Included In the program were de\'o� I "-..( . .,...... r_ tlons. <'onductpd by Betty Kenworthy: "Christ Is anything but a mart)·r. a \'ocal solo. "The Lord's Prayer." by ' There ne\'er was an Instant when he .. \nlta Norman. accompanied on the PI_ I could not by his own power have .�reed ano by Miriam Hopp. and a worship 0(- himself and destroyed the enemy. r",rlng led uy MarIe Funk. Dr. J. P. Pflueger.

Hostesses for .the OCCltS!OIl wt!rt! Mrs' l Ch'�;�� ab::��

oS:

w;e

ar:r:OI��:I::Y !�� 8. Tlngelstad. MISS Gertrude Tingelstad .,

lind )Irs. )1. f'raock. tram God and m�::.

toh71��:n

o�r::��:

,s.

Peerless GrHI Noted tor their EfI'lclenc)' Prompt Menke, and Fine Food

9 15 Commerce MA. 9702

Immanuel Lutheran Churcb, "The sum at the ChrIstian life Is to

follow Christ. Only He can gh'e the Christian strength to carry the cross. Cross-bearing never stops; It may mean a lItetlme at suffering."

Pres. S. C. Eastvold. 0============='11 "============� "If Jesus Christ Is going to live, as TRICKS • JOKES · MAGIC rr: far as you and I are concerned. He Is

(.."u8t.ome8 _ Ttuedoe • SerpeotlDeti going to live In us." BROADWAY Rev. H. Rydell,

Neal E. Thorsen 9 2 6 1,02 Broadway MAin t861 MOTOR CO.

First Lutheran Church, Tacoma. "There Is nothing that kills the good

things ot the beart more than the love at money."

Girls' Sports Clothes MAIlE GOOD SCHOOL GAIMENTS

Specialized A..to 1 ..... ."1.'

Sta.darcllud 'rlces

7H Broadway ·BR. 3 8 6 2

"When we Inveat our abilities in the service ot God there are no regrets, be­cause we have sacrUlced our Ume and our energy In bis service. Where God Is, there will be blessings."

Rev_ L. Rumussen.

S .. TIoe ... at

Washington Sports Shop 9 1 8 P;'CIFIC AVENUE

Johnson & Anderson GIOCEIIES _ FLOUI - HAT GRAIN ETC:.

On the Mountoin Highwoy Porklond, Wllsh.

ANDERSON LUMBER COMPANY 9802 PACIFIC AVENUE

GRanite -73 1 1

SEARS. ROEBUCK , ANI( CO. Iroadwaj at 13th

Parkland, Waah.

ALL THE GOODNESS '111111111111 THE �:���:I�:� 111�llllt MEDOSWEET KRE1il�LK

..;,,;.�, .

� ' �����!�A'! ��.�h.'��" . ' ,�fl� { " .. �. (, ��!� � . , Two P.L.C. girl atbSetee, CECELIA W. A. A. tournament baAketball games,

Q.ARDbI-N aM: RUTH PF-LU.EG-Elt. whieh, iD(ligeDtaill'. are Quite AplrUed have bMn bonoted with loTttalloni to play on tIle ·Parkland Girls' Bulr.etball team. Thelf ft"t game with tMs· team Is IItbeduled for Thureday, March 8. Congratulations, gala! !

and otten.. eaua.e numerous toot bUsters and ftoor b\,lfDS. Pau tbe gaUIe and salve, please! ! !

Valentines Day found the glrla' dorm In the spMng a young man'lI faney tilled with "oobs" aad "ahhhhhs'· &8 ex­

Itgbtly turnl to .prtng houAecleanios. cited girls dllplayed lovely presents or There "'-as a homey atmosphere pre· ... n. Valeotlnes, nOWNS, pictures, candy: and Ing when VERNON BERG and WALT corsages. One ardent admirer, reall.tOl LOGSDEN flew Into a cleanlns eam· his "Valentine" would get only a tute palgn 10 their second floor rooms. But of the cbocolates be sent, Included a IUlplcions were aroulled when the two l'Iecond box for her vulture·frtends. To calUan,. threw .Upper., boots and work P.L.C. girls, men like EVANGELINE sboel out their IMCond Itory windows AHRENDT'S admirer equals Utopia. Jeopardlslns the IIvea of Innocent by- But tbe lud:lest Sirl or all wu standen below. Could It be this Itranse MRS. HOLSTAD, who received a. Val­bebavlor Is the result of too much COD- entloe signed by ever)" bo, In the dorm . . centratJon OD the beloved researcb-pa- I • •

pers which 80 many professors enjoy CADET MILDR�D BRODLAND MAR· recelvlDg &.long about this Ume-'!' TIN, who te.eMs tbe sixth grade at

FERN ERICKSON Is winning acclaim Parkland Grade. Sehool, got a bit of tbe as a ontl-man cheering section at the "Ctrte" handed her

00 a sliver platter

tbe other day. "I know what you are,"

Gr.d Write. ( Continued from Page On.,

and the aoswer book wblch he In del­paratloD finally put at my disposaL··

voluntlrt!red one of her 12-year-olds. "you·re one of those halt - learned teachers. , .

.Concernlng his Indirect approach to tb;�:8Sfl:,��c

k;:n

�:;r

���� t::a.

fa::I�!� ilterature. Laurence continues: "Be- were "wblte unto harvest" but tbat the

�:;e

:u::8in

Ig

r::lv:k:�e: ;;

db:=�v���r:! laborers were very few, asked us to

playing football, Profell8Or Pflueger remember these islands in our prayers, orten tried to Ihow me the ftne point. She was attired In a native formal of literature. Dat he dlda't have the dress wblcb otber ml88lonariel In the same tenaelouA patience of the other Pblllppines had given ber to wear wheo teachers wbo bad the misfortune to In. ahe brought greetings from the 1.Ia.nds. hutt me, so after 1 made a few sorry The skirt was made of pineapple flber exhibitions of recitations, elpecially of and the bodice was a banana product. Scotch �ms In dialect, be gently blnt- The stiff material was dyed green and ed that perbaps I would be Interested embroidered witb white thread. in Journalism. Well. as a matter of fact. Miss Erickson left Mantia on tbe last 1 was." boat to make- Its regular run before tbe

In tbe next paragraphs, Laurenee de- Pearl Harbor attack. Sbe II now the scribes his Journalistic debut with Director of the Weekly Cburcb School

- .... -:-0. --

"'V;u."I', � .. �""" I ... fan­U&i"Y at North High School. Minneapolli. Mlnaeaat ... and iIr(j"f'ed� hnifledlately to TaeorM wltb· her, raiDfJy. She mt._

In co ...... JilD .. tt¥1··tajIi'· heard each .. eDI .. . trOJD "e�r. ·are, DQN . .BlL-LINGSLltY" S,_tu'tdar l'I8n41t1oD1i Oil hi. a"d""OIf�:i!:. . .' .

the mow In thfj £ut."�u' libs the West 1 1�!!!Jl!I!![!!!!li!i!!l!!!J!!!!!!I!!!!!i�!!!Il!'l'!!!i!,!� Aeep(- f&I' aU t'lM-';"ht. · \I - ._ - . � .. � - -- ' '''-- r .-MARIE FUNK, who �radu.ted In �-

January from 9remertoD HIgh School. .. . � Is taking a pre-Bunlng course and .,-. hope. to enter 8.ed,.h Ho.p"a

' ,. s.- . �

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Join with the rest to e lect �he best:

i If. An

-ED\ ucat�d voter

as EI IEIDIT for

SAl A HilI i) H !H) ! !l U E E 11 I��D'""�DS�AIIO�

it's

j) F I D 1]

Parkland Hardware

lIcyc'"

1.,.1 • • 'arb , .......

';' Block Eost of Colloqe

POUNTAIII SDYICR BLUE RUSTIC

MounWn SIKhw.y

Mars CLOTHI ... '.81 •• '" ... ...... ..... letlarid & Palagruti

928 p .... nc A..-Due Ta.coma !. WUh1DctOD

AllDIUOII 510CDY

Parkland. Wuh_ GR_ 8660

SOIIOOL IRJWIoID .... BOMB RlDMJal)IB8

llOOIDALI LUMIIIl CO. MountaiD Hlsbw.y

BROOKDALE, WASH. gusto, tbrowlng In for good measure a In Tacoma. lon-g batred editor and a dlstraugbt ad- ....,,============11 1�:::;�;:::::::�1�::::::::::::: vlaer and concludel In summary "All II I thinSI conBfdered, perbaps It wa� best WHO FItMlWlLL-S that I signed most of my articles 'Joe ,. 01 Blow ! ' ,. INt

Anotber paragrapb gives his own Vel"- , . OUIITAIN slon of his grid performance. "I think IS " THE J

IATUID my Brat uDltorm betonged to PLC', atar-balf back In 1898; ·the locker boy

• said " .... all he had Ie" and I woe DARK HOitSE ::d

ta�b

ee l!.e;,�e:.:e ;�re!�

t t�

t�:t�:

e: CndlClcife for

astle, I .... tb . ..... t taekllng dummy SAGA KING tbe sebool bad' 8eefi aln� "Blimp" Mo-

'IPO fUllDAL ItQMi 5<56 S. PUGET SOQND

GArl.nd� '.36

iiu'� Chick.n Diilner

iftit 0R<iH.um 'RILL

_. �. __ _ 1Ae line ran the gamut some yearA ago. I I�=============: 1 Welt, anyway. Coacb OI80n bad four I , �;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. �,,�_�,:, _:::::::::::� goo4 tea.m. and I wu a IterUas mem- Ii her 01 the "tth." COLLEGE HAIRCUTS

Good gOing, Laurence, You b ..... kept , A i If L A N D • A • i • • your grand senee ot humor over theN In tbe mld.t of tblnga. And we'll be C. R. MARSH

lookJog for you soon, amoog our re-turning alu�8. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;�

lor · fOUl' EASTER ". ARDR9BE

KAY KARLSON 822 South 9th

OAKES APPARI<L

921 Broad way Tacoma

Mrs. Frisbies Bakery

FOR FINE BAKBRY PRODUO'I'8 110 So. 38th at. Phone GA. 7691

Have Yout Portrait Made the < .

Ml)dem Way I �'l MODERNE P9RTRAIT STUDIO

'HOII. MAllo 5431 9TH ond PACI FIC AVENUE TACOMA

HATI AT THE ROLLER BOWL

SOUTH TACOMA WAY

I � , Test

Week Blues Again

VOL. 22 Eastvold Returns With Gifts From California

Presif\l.'nl S. C. E.1 st\'old returned Sat­urd;ay 11101"11;nJ,!' frolll his trip South, hringing with him .'{ifts 10 I"LC tutaling $ l I JK)O from fOUT p<lri shcs in Cdiforn;a.

Dr. East\"oh.l was guest speaker on f (l 11 r consc("tll;Y(': S 11 n d a y 5 a t the churches tendering this gift. visiting fir .. t. on Fe�, the Rev. R. Hovland's church in ,san Francisco. On March 4.

he spoke ' at Our Savior's I.utheran Church in Los Angeles. of which the Re\". ). \\", Carl�on is pastnT. On \Iarch 1 1 . he \";s;le(1 the Ht,\,. A , \1. ;.Jelson's Church i n t.ong 'Beach. <l.nd 0 1 1 the fol­lowing Sunday, March 18. the Pasadena

ch.1Tge o f the Rev, Joseph Berg On March 14. the Southern California

Ci rclI lt P<lStors Illct in Lns Anl-{eles and orJ.,rani7.erl for the fil�al Golrlen Jubilee appeal. ()n the f('1Iowing' da\,. the Cir­Cl1l1 Pastors of :-.iorthern California met with Dr. Ea.'it\ nlrl to or!-:,anize for the fi nal dri\'l' ill Ihis ci rClli t.

The objective of the Golden Juhi lee appeal in the ?\orwe,J.::'ian Ll1lht'ran Churche� i.'i $ 1 50,()(X). Tht· amount still nel·rll·d to reach this goal is $20.000 and all �tales ill the PLC area, in which the !\'orwegian Lutheran Churches cxi�t, are 0rganizin� hetween Penteco�t and Easter in an dfort to raise this amount. \Vash­ingtoll . ()r(',�on. California. I daho and Montana confidently expect to reach their goal.

The A merican Luther·an educational appeal ha� reached its goal and a check for $"5.000 has been ,':ent to tIlt' Cullege Building Fund. The \Vomen's ),1ission­ary Federation of the NLCA has almost

(Continued on Page Four)

RED CROSS DRIVE NOW IN PROGRESS

The mouth of ),Iarch has bt'ell sel a�id(' for Ih� A me ri can Red Cro,� drl'·e. Umit-r its ("ongrc!'sional charter. the Red Cross is the officia l American agency re­sponsi ble for disaster relief and i� the official medium of cOllllTlllnic ation he­tween the people of the United States of :\merica and their :\rl1l)' and i\"avy.

Dr. Pfluege r repre sents the facuity, and Agnes Roleder. assisted by �.firia m

- - >

'PA�.I"'.IC -

L�T. E R A. C O L L E G E

- But Vacation

Is Coming

MARCH 22, 1�5 No. 10 DEAN NELSON PLACES HALOS UPON THE HONORED H E A D S OF SAGA ROYALTY CHOIR TO PRESENT

"THE CRUCIFIXION"

KING ED AND QUEEN LOIS

Crowned King and Qlleen ..of the '45 Saga Carnival. Ed 8erndt. dorm frtshman. and Lois Dahl. day jn�shman. rdgned over an evening of fUQ and fantasy' Friday night in the. college gym. The of· ficial crowning was perform­ed by Dean NeI!'on, rrc�lItly dhtinguishr"u by his practice of placing halo!' 011 the hrads of hi� ;lIlgels in the hoys' dorm.

"Pop's angels" were wdJ represented ill a str i ct ly male cast portrayal of hfe in the girls' dorm. Dressed 11\ clothe� frolll the girls' own wardrobl's. the Dean's llarl­ings enactefl astonishingl), accurate scenes including the regular tell o'clock reducing . rhythmics a.' \\'l'1I as the red

. tape process invoh'ed in ob-' taining one of those nO\'el­ties girls call dates.

The Choir of the Wut undrr fhe di­reclion of Prof. Gun nar J . Malmi n will present "The Crucifixion," a meditation on the sacrrd fla�'1ioll of the Roly Re­drrmer by John Stain�r. tomorrow morning al 9:50 a. Ill. in Trinity Luther­an Church and also Sunday rvening. March 25. at 7 ·JO p. Ill" In th(' First I.lItheran Church. Tacoma. Rn Ca rl E Rydell . pastor. This cantata is for a fll ll chortl'!. oi l11i�('(t voices. and many '1tlldent� who are not memhrrs of the choir are singinR with the grol1p.

Tho: Rrv. F.. 5, T01l('f�0n of M0111llaill

Vir\\' Lutheran Church will be thr bas!! solnlst I,.V h ile atteTldlilK LlI th(' r Theo­logiral Seminary in St. Palli. �I in nesola. Rr\-. Tollefson wa s a ll1('mher of the Seminar), :"fale Quart('t. which loured Norway III 1927. Re, . Tollt'fson also 'H­te nded Chie:1l{o ,"us;c Schonl and ap­peared in an oper3 III that city .

Other �olnists will be sopranos Isahd Harstad and Lydia Lentz. and altos Hjordis Rogen and Ani ta Norman. Thrf"f' �hort has� solos are to he taken hy choir member.s Robert Larson.

Shirley Morgan was mis· tress of ceremonies for the evening with the aid of an overstuffed character known Arnold Towe. and Gordon Gano.

as Miss Pansy \Vaist (Anita ),In. :\lice Spencer \\·eiss. organis t

Roth). 3t First Lutneran Church. will accom. pany the cantata.

m�ic:;��;'::��:::l�rs g��;I�d:� -------

a gir ls ' trio and bOys' clari- Sextette Now Planning n<l qu",'" f,om Lincoln Tour of High Schools

H igh School. Vocals by Lydia Lentz, a R i�k�-Kuhn violin duet. the GulhJ.lIg en.s The Girl s' SexleHe will make a con-at the piano. and our own girl!' sextette completed the music of the evening. cert tour through northern \Vashi ngton

Margaret E\l i� and Louise Tollfeldt's hili-billy act was short. sweet. and savory. f rom �I onday . !\pri! 9, to Friday. April

I l elcn Olsen's SC3ndinavian interpretation of a ball game sou nded pleasantly lJ. Mr� . . Rhoda Young will accompany familiar to the 13rgeiy �ordic audienct'. theili. a nd will show he r moving pictun:s

Scandinavian food. too. was popular . and the gayly costumed '{iris found their o f li le on P. L C. campus. supply bought Ollt at an early hour Their fir.�t stop will be In Puyallup.

;\ nd all the w hil e screams pervaded the lallgh-ii lle d atmoslvht'fe as young and then Sumner and Auburn. with an over· old invaded thc horror .chamber. night stopover i n Kenl. TUesday. the

Prizes for buying the mo�t \\-ar Bonds and Stamps wrre divided into three group will sing in Renton. Snohomish groups. The winners were Mary Olson. daughter of Coach Cliff Obon. for the and Bothe:1l. staying for the night in grade school students ; Mr",. H ag-euess. college secret.ary, for the college members : Everett. A little further north, the girls and Mrs. Charles Breckenridge for the outsiders. will give a co nc ert i n Marysville. and

\Villller oi the bean guessing conlest was our printing instructor. Mr. Beard then back again in Everett for \Vednes· Dorothy Nieman, head of the Saga carni\·al. estimates at least a $200 profit from day evening. They will bring the good

the $320 taken in. will of P.L.e. along with their music. to Edmonds. and across the Sound to Port

Hopp, th, ,tud'nt body in the <ampu, I Mrs Holstad t Sp k effort. SoliCItors arc Shlfley tI,·f organ. I · 0 ea Syl\'ia Blomelie. Anita Norman. Jean at JJ7 M F Convention

Start Those Thinkers, A ll You Sophomores!

Townsend. Sequim and Port A ngeles on Th ursday. On Friday they will return to Seattle.

Lon-old. Carol Peterson. I ngrid ),[artin­son. Carol Eidson. Janct · Hauge. \'ern­on Berg. Aruold Towe, and Boh Larson.

Coming cvents FRIDAY, MARCH 23-American

Ba1l3d Singers. fifth offering of Lyceum Serie s. Fi rst Baptist Church, 8:30.

SATURDAY. M A R C H 24-AS8-sponsored movie: "EN SAGA," a Norwegian film

SUNDAY. MARCH 2S--Cantata: "The Crucifixion," presented br PLC choir. At First Lutheran . . Church, 7 :30.

TUE SDAY and WEDNESDAY, MA RCH 27·28 - Mid-seme'ster examinations.

WEDNESDA y, MA RC H 28, af­ter classes to Monday. April 2, 8:00 a. m.-Spring recess.

MONDAY, APRIL 9 TO FRI­DAY. A:PRIL 13 - Spiritual Emphasis \Veek. See story for details.

Accepting an invitation to be guest speaker at the Southern Cali fornia \Vom,en's Missionary Federation Cpn­venti Oil in Los Angeles. Mrs. K. A. Hol­stad w ill leave for the Sou th Thursday, March 29. Fol lowing the convention she

Sophomores are taking the 14th an­nllal Nat ional SophomOf'e C o l l e g e Tests toda)" and tomorrow, March 22. 23. The purpose of these tests is to "aid students in making a better adjustment to college work and in gaining a better

will spend a couple weeks presenting P. knowledge of their abilities and inter­L. C. to groups in other cities alollg the ests."

Tohe Sextette will present a half-hour concert in the high schools ' during the days and in various Lutheran churches i n th e even ings.

The Sextette is composed or Ruth Jensen, Ve dis Huseboe, Syh'ia Blomelie. Jeanette BurzlaH, An na Anderson. and Hiordis Rogen.

coast. There are three sections to this test : a There are abou t 18 songs in their

l'ooperati�e English test, a cooperati\-e repertoire. half sacred and haH secular

general culture test. and a coo.perativel and popu lar. Dr, Le Sourd Visits PLC Dr. Howard M. LeSourd, Dean of

the Graduate School of Boston Univer:

contemporary affairs test. -� -------

Sometime in May the tentative -per- Spiritual Emphasis Week Begins April 9

Spiritual Emphasis Week, a period set sity and Director of the American Pal- centile norms and interpretative leaflets

estine Committee. was a visito r 011 the will be sent to the colleges. The individ­

campus \Vednesday, March 15. ual results will be mailed to the Cooper-Speaking at chapd exercises. Dr. Le- ativp Test Service, New York. which apart on �he P. L. C. campus each

SOllrd sketched the plight of th e Jews spousors these tests. Each student will spring, has been scheduled for the sec­

in the world today aud stated that the receive an interpretative leaflet explain- ond week in April. aim of the American Palestine Commit- ing his score. The Reverend Orren Cons!,!ar. A. L. tee is that the Jews should ha\'c Pales- The final national results will be p\lb- C. pastor from Lewi ston. Idaho. will tine as t�eir own homeland. lished in July.

be gllest speaker. He will talk in chapel , Dr. LeSourd was also the guest of Last year 20.000 college sophomores

the fac'ttlt), at a luncheon \Vednesday in 152 American colleges and uni\'cr- each day and will conduct meeting:> noon in the recreation room. sities participated in these tests. every evening in the recreation" room.

.... �.P�-•• :::::. .:... ......... .;;::.;;...�-.. ----.--.--------- �I

. -

�--. '""j' .... ..... .J >. PAGE TWO PACIFIC LUTHERAN COLLEGE

TH !,ce�m� O � !.!.�an!!�5T W:��HTEHSEE���:S SubscriplioD prlce-U.OO per Year Publtllbed every two weekl!l during tbe eehool year by

EnteN!d &8 seeoad clue m.Uer. October 2. 1925.. at the Post Orllce at Parklan.d. Wuhlngton, under tbe Act or

students of Pacific Lutheran College. March 3 . 1 8 7 9 .

Rl'!.·.·i\ i n S" his call for induction last w("('k, Ed Berndt. fro�h. en1ered the U.

I S . . -\rmy �ronda�·, �Iardl 11. l i e is �ta· I tiolled at Ft. Lewis at present.

OO-EDITORS _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ���� _ _ ���IT." STUEX . .. '..LICE BRUDIE .-\.I�o �tat i('r\('11 at Ft. Lewi� the past

AA80ciate Edttor _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Theodore Reitz "'t'ek { temporarily) was Gerhard Rosin. Sport.8 Reporter _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Walt Kunschak t'lI; ·4.;. <lw:\l\Lng iurtht'r assignment RePJ��el:��

lI?f

o���

e �

re�\J

I�

e-al�'

t.:\rdys Bred,·old, Telma �-{ etzger. Anita Roth, Ruth The Rev. Milton· L, Nesvig. '35, pastor

AdYber __________ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ MTs. Ruth Franck of Immamll' 1 Lutheran church in Tacoma smCt July, 1942. has been commissioned BUSINESS STU""F

BU8INE88 MANAOEIL _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ IX>ROTHY NIE.\IAN AnUtlaDt JI.&nager _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ � _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Marlan Butler BualneM Secretary _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Inga Jobnlon Advertlaing Manager _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Corlnne Erickson Circulation _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ .• _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Cecelia. Gardlln Servicemen's Circulation _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Annabelle Blrk6!liol �cbange _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Grace Blrkeltol Solicitor s : �Iargle Carlson. Grace Gulhauge-n. Rllmohr Gulhaugell. Jocelyn Lynne.

Ruth Bjerkan. and S\·h-ia BlOlllelie Advleer _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ � _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 0, J, Stuen

a lieutenant j. g. in thc chaplain corps of the na\'al Tcsen·e, i t was announced by na"}' officiallO IOllO! week, Rev, Nesyjg has s("rved as PLC alumni president since 1943. H (" wi"lI rec�i\'e his training �t the CoUeit(" of \\"illiam and 1lary, Willi am.sburg, Va.

A Illidg("t r("union 01 service men was held rather u!1expcctellly a week ago

Th F f E Tues.day evening. when Marv Shaw. 1.':< e act 0 aster ''''3, now al Madigan Hospital; Olav By Rev, L. A. B. Nelwn Sola. 42', former stmlent body presid("nt.

\\·e are living in a ti111e when the very fOl1ndation� of allllo�t everything ar(" and John Otnet .. ex '43, appeared in the heing shaken. �tan·s faith in himself and his fellow:, i� \·ery unst<lble. Many are boys· dorm. :\.farv was stayinl': overnight asking, · ·\\·l1at can I be1i�\"(' and in what may I trllsl?" Our unsettled attitude when Olav Sola walked i n for a short caus�s ns to Question ('\'ell ollr Christian faIth. the church ;\nd all we have h�hl \'i:,it before going back to gU<lrd duty dear. at Ft. Lewi!', wh("re he is now station("d.

�Iay we Question the validity of our iaith) Is not doubt a terrible sin ? Does A short time later John Otness, m("m­

March n. 1945

In a r("c("nt Ie-tttr to the- M. M. Stan Ariton. e:< '43, write:, that in his r�cent ,'isit to the call1pu� ··many face" wcrt' unfamiliar. other changes arc III eVI­dence, but t¢te atmosph("rt' of Chrys{I:111 kUow.s.bip .characteristic of- PLC still remains--ran atmos.ph�re ref�reshillg in contrast 10 · that i n th(" army." I n e,­prusing his thanks for th(" �1. �f. in the States and hOIJing that it will follo\, him on·rsea8o, he says: "I I\lTl confide1l1 that other former "tud("nts now i n tIll" various bunche:, of tire sen-je(", who are abl� to folio\\' the enthusiastic growth 01 P.J..C through the-ir paper, are abo eOlg("r 10 return." Address: ·T-4 Stan I . Ariton. 392 I ?640, 3182 Sig Ser C o . . Camp Crowder. �iis sOllri.

IEI.LAND HAIDWAII CO.

984.8 PACIFIO

OR. 8180

the te<;ling and provin� of our faith help or wl'aken u s ? \V� have a faith tbat can ber of the Merchant Marine. dropperl l l-.-------------�tand the test-a faith that has power and reality Ollr Christian faith is not in. H i s ship wa!' at anchor in Tacoma 1 ,..-------------founded in fancy but grolllHied in f<let for a few hours. Mar\". now on a JO-day Lundberg Drug Easter is the fact of our f<lith The resnrrectlon of Christ gives worth and hlrlough, has left for a trip to California. power to our Christian religion. Having conquered death, Chri�t li'·es victorious Earl Gulberl. ex.· ... 3. recei,("d his B. S. over sin and Satan and give!' salvation and the abundant life to all who will receive, degre(" at Northwestern University a 1 1 8 3 0 PACIFIC AVE,

PHONE GR. 8619 \\"ltI10Ilt the fact of the resll1rection our faith is vain-we are still i n our lIiDS, short time ago. Address: Earl A. Gul· children of wrath, without hope. without Carl i n the world, ali�ns, strangers, anrl berg, A . S., V-12, USNR, U. S. Navy ("nemies of God. But Christ has risrn and we who believe in Him have the assur- Hospital Staff. Great Lakes. Ill. 1 '-____________ ---1 ance that we art: saved_ reconciled. and made nigh. \Ve arc lellow citizens with the l i:'============� saints and God is for us-so who C;"ln he against us: II When 1011 WADt otftco suppUet

C. FRiD. CHIISTINSEN STATIONER ( Rosenburgl)

Thi5 Eastcr Christ again as:,ures and strengthens our faith He has o\"("rcome, and trustil,g in H l Ill W{'. too, do I'::ain the victory.

Fear not. I am with tl!ee. o be not dismayed For I a m thy God, And \\ill �till give thee aid

* * * A re You a Blank?

Three or lour em ply frollt row � : a �111attering of students behind these. This is what our chapel :'pe3l.:erS han' been facing lat�ly \\·e\·e had some \·ery good �Jleaker�. too, but that makes no apparent differ('llce in the attendance interest of a considerable numhl'T of ollr qudents. For d;ly alta day it i� tht' ··faithfl1l h'w " w h o COIllI'.

Shipment of a variety of brighr colored papers

new!y arrived. Come

in and pick the kind you wan£. IOe . I5c Sheet

P. L. C. DEPARTMENT OF PRINTING

Basement of Chapel

9 1 3 Pacific Ave. BR. 4629

STOP AT

Y E;l l] j� for o.Ilcloul HambMrgers

Hot Dot. J.mbo MIlUioak •• French Frt ..

at 9tII aod Pacific

Ch<lpel attendance is emphasized at PLC because those in char!{c realize that It is a necessary part of the tr<lining gi\·en here. They do not want to iorce chapd atte-ndance. and vet the\' do look upon it as �omething expect("d voluntarily of each �tudenl. I t give� an e:,·peci<llty bad impr('s�ion to those visitors from onlsid(" when they �("c only a small number of students prtsent at chapel. I t creates the feeling ;������������=�=====::::::::::::::::: that W(", a1thou�h stud�nts ;n a Chriqian school. care so little ahout nurturing and qrengthening our faith that we spend the half hour set a�ide for daily devotion \"loin", sOlllethinll wh-ich could just as well be done at another time

Chapel :o.ttt'ndance should not he thought of as jU5t a duty; rather, i t is a privilege. It is one of the things. which �et our school <lpart from state schools. It is one of the rea�ons w(" have a school HICh as ollrs in the first place Let us resolve' now in this L("nten season to make chapel a ··must"' instead of a " mayb("" in our daily schedule.

* * * \\'e wish to extend Ollr sincere sympathy to Mis� Dora Be-rg, art instructor,

in her bereavemenl upon the sudden death of her mother, Sunday, M<lrch 1 1 .

* * * Grin and Bear It

The facuity, hke the poor. are always with us. and if pleasure cannot be do!­ri\"("d from contemplating the inevitable, at least there's a thing called stoic philos­ophy. �ay, not two things are certain, but rather three-termination, ta:<es and teachers. They are as inevitable as football in th(" fall-as a young man's f3ncie .. in Ih� spring. Their word is final (th("ir exams too, incidentally.) They are Ihe upper and we the nether mill�tone in this scholastic grind.

" I f I were sitting on the other side of the desk." . . . Sounds familiar, doesn't it? All right-what if we WERE! Do you know what w("'d be doing right now: \Ve'd probably be expounding on "The sludents, like the poor. arc wilh U!! 3Iways."' Words would flow on unendingly, undoubt("dly . . liNDOUBTEDLY� * * *

Three o'Clock in the Morning ;\ fire {Irill at thr("e o'clock in the morning isn'l good for anyone's beauty sleep.

I t took IwO and a half minutes to empty Ihe dorm at the first fire drill; over four minutes at the last one. I I ' s suppo:'ed 10 work the other way around. ),ou know. \Ve could imagine Betty Lou Reik(" da"hing back Ihrough flames to rescue her ,"iolin, but not Mim or Ag taking time out to lock the the door to guard against bed dumpers.

Fire drills .1 re serious. Their neglect IWly have tragic result:,. How abo'lt rlvin� <I better job of e:<iting next time. ('\·e11 if sletpy·eyed people at the bottom oi the stairs will persist i n asking. ··Is this a fire dril1'"

_ _ ::::::::::_ •• _::::u: •

7� BUB that i t i s now under

new management

py a former

PLCite

Open from 8 'til 7

FEATURING HOT LUNCHES

every day and

REAL ITALIAN SPAGHETII

every Thursday

• ·",, 11

�larch 22, 1945

TO BE OR NOT TO BE ]{o!'('!> are red, \·;olet� are blue I tln:ad exam week .\nd I know yuu do, too. Tt'a.dwrs will quiz 1Ih'� I ju!>t can·t bluff. The\" ·]! finll it"s quite (I'r:a111 I don·t know enough.

I i they hUI ]Jas� me I \"lH'· this t · !! do­

\Pl'ly myself !le:<!;t term To pr, ,\·,· 1 'm true blue.

1 f tllt'Y don't pas.: 1110:: 1 " 1 1 leave it at that. 1 ·01 t:lke the COurse ov('"r, BUI what do you thiuk I am, a su..:ker �

Daphne Hellman

S E L D E N ' S First In Floor Coverl.gl

OCCASIONAL FURNITURE LINOLEUM · RUGS SHADES · BEDDING

DRAPERIES

qUALITY KNITTING CO.

934 COMMERCE

RAYMOND ELiCTRIC CO.

S l :! PACIFIC AVENUE BRdwy I i 1 2

.- .. -..:.y PACIFIC LUTHERAN COLLEGE PAGE THREE

L�tes L ose Close Game I Llite Debater� �ttend !Gladiators Conquer I LC. M arch 6-Aher � 111.p alld tu..:k I Tournev at LJnfield bailie all th" wa:\, . the l.lad.ators Wefe � 0. • Peace Lutheran

finally 0, l'rCOIl1\' b\" the Oakl:lnd Pres E lalllt' SlTlllh, Ruth Johnson and VIr· v

b:Ylenau churc.h 4�i(ltet 40 to 38. The gi l 5aQ!o!l'. lJl('mbers of the PLC debate PLC. .\brc.h 8--.H.e\'('n� II1M il defeilt Lutes put up a determined game beio."l' tl·;III1, kft :\hrch 7 for the Li nil('ld ('arlier III Ih(' st'ason hy the Pe:Ke Lu. going down. Thl, game was a close con· Cnllt·!o:t· IOr('IISle tlHlrl1 :1I11t·nl at �l c :\l inll· tht'rall church five. tht' PLC quintet It'st all Iht' wa\" with nelthcr t('am able "i lk. Oregon. The tri" arri'·ed at Lin· IrOllllCl'l1 Ihe bllY� from I't'ace by a 47 10 gel :1 ('�1ll11l�nding lead. Tht' Oakland field Collcge 011 Thursday. M ar. 8, De- to 3 1 .�cor('. Tht' church li\,1': took an fi\l' Ilad a 18 tl' .!7 halftimt' lead. bates Iwgan at .; 30. \' ir�il 5;1\'a,ll:(' did l·ady lead <Iud I"r :1 fe\\' IlHlHl les i t I l ughl's. lanky \2(.'lIlt'r o i Oakland. '\' ilh <1o\lhle t1l1t�· . lie-baling both IH'jtati\"e ,lud ),'okt'11 a s I i Iht'Y mi,l{ht rev('at their Ins ("ullnand of Ihe back bO<lrd� "corl'd aHiflll:ltin' sidt'�, whik Elaine Smilh earlin )!t'rlormalll·l'. I n the H.,.ond 21 poinls 10 annex scoring honors for the galllt' Br:l1lllller oi PLC, playillg his last game 01 thl' sl'a.�oll. rall llell a bl':Iutifl11 hook shot for th�· lliit'n�il"(, Ilighlight oi the ,ll:anH·.

I'LC 1 38 . Oakland \-iO)

"'ok thl' llt'!i::ati\t' sid" and \·,rgil SilV­.1gl' also took part in the IlTlprovtu sP('ak.

\ l l holll<:h th(' PI.C rOl1lillgt'llt did 110t get into th.' finals. decision� for the in.

di\'idual d('ba�es ha'·e not yet been an-:\ordeng j il l F j 4 1 :\lle11 n0l111c('d. Twenty·two schools w('re rep-H('rndt ( 1 6 1 F Linfield re�ent('(1. "0111(' of Ih(, II('haters coming Kunschak e ] ) C (221 Hut<:hes from sllch . far away i1l stlll1tion� as Brammer (4) .... _ G ( 3 1 C"rhell George Pel>perdine of California, Llni [at'(h G ( I I ) Kohout \·crsity of S(luth('T!l California and MOil .

I S\lhst1tul�� PI C�Logsdoll Towe, tana Stat(' Coll('ge. }{edlsk(' (]) Plhl (2)

I Ruth John ... on and \"irgil Sa\·aKl' took COlltent1l1t'nt' Oh ht."auttfl11 thought � I part in the forell!'ic tournament at Se·

\Ild Ht---(:ould 11 bl' Just anoth.:-r name a t tic Pacifir Colle�e :\farch 13 and 14.

for being too lazy to hettt'r one's selP

Victor's Market DOLO STORAGE I..()(JI(BR8 • GJ.lOCEIU1!I8

BROOKDALE MEATS •

GR. 853S

c. O. Lynn Co. 717

TAOOMA AVE.

MORTUARY

TRICKS . JOKES · MAGIC

OlI8tomee • Toxedoe • 8erpeatines Neal E. Thorsen

9 2 6 ¥.! Broa.dwa.y MAin 4861

The t('am took part in al l of th(' se"t'n rounds oi debate. alt<'rnating with th(' negati,·e and affirmati\·e liides. Virgil Savag(' also took part in the impromptu spcakinK cont('st� Results ha\'(' not )'el been receiv('d.

The best thing to do wilh a colle�t'

(jt'gree after earning- it is 10 forge I it.

Peerless GrHI Noted tor their £:fUcleDC7

Prompt Service, and FIne Food 9 1 6 Commerce MA, 9702

BROADWAY MOTOR CO.

quarter th(' l"ollege tt:3111 ca111e 10 lif(' and start('d makin,.; a gam(' of it. Th(' �ecol1d half found I ill' ..:ol1l''';lans piling up a r0111fortah1t� lead to w i n going away .s.coring hOllors wellt to Nord('ng of PI .C with 1 7 Ill,ints anll Bennett (>f I't'art· with 16

I'Ll" 1 4 i ) I�('dl�kl' ( � ) �" rdt·lll! ( I i ) Bermlt ( 1 1 ) .r al"l.�h I S ) l'illl 161

( .� 1 ) l'('ac,' Luth·n F . A Riggt'r� F }{ \\ · ilhel111 C ( 2 ) R Rl!1:ger� G (5) E. R l ggt'rs G (8) C. Riggers

:O;ubq il ntt's· PLC-Log ... dol1, Towe Pl'a(t' Lllt1l(:rall�B. Fr:1I1k ,( 16). :\. Benllett

Glads Drop Bombardiers In a gam(' · play('d in PI.Cs gYIll

March 1, the Luth('rans d('{eated Ihe South Sidl' ROlllbar<li('rs by a �cor(' of SR to 41. The Gladiators were in com­Inand all Ih(' way, enjoying a comfort. altle kat! which was at no time threat­,'l1('d by Ihe visiting t('a1l1. I t was th(' st'ennll win of tht' season over the Born. bardiers_ Nnrd('ng of PLC. who amassed 28 point .... look indi\·idual scoring han· ors for th(' conte-"t

PL(" (:;R) R('diskr an �ordl'lIg (2R) Ber11dt ( i ) Jacch ( 7 ) Pilll ( 8 )

Suhstitlltl'S

(.1\ ) Bombardiers ( 10) Dalsanto

F ( 1 3 ) Marini;{ . C (9) Smith G ( 4 1 }.a('ch G ( .i ) Rapha('1

PLC-Logs<!on. Tow('.

\\"hell 1"011 1I 1l'I't ;tn interM'<"tioll. you look ri/<:ht and left. \Vh('1\ YUll IIlel't

ynu look right or you·r(' Idt.

Girls' Sports Clothes MAKE GOOD SCHOOL GARMENTS

Speclall .... Auto Repalrl.g

Sta.dardl.ed Pricol

7 1 4 Broadway BR. 3S62

HELEN DAVIS Smart A pparel

Q I 7 Broadway

See Them at

Washington Sports Shop 9 1 8 PACIFIC AVENUE

Johnson & Anderson GROCERIES • FLOUR • HAY .. • GRAIN • nco

On the Mountoin Highwoy Porklond. Wosh. THE NAME IMPLIES . . . HOMOGENIZED

ANDERSON LUMBER COMPANY 9802 PACIFIC AVENUE

GRonite 73 1 I

ALL THE GOODNESS �II� MEDDSWEET KR��jli

.I LK

....../) Yes-Women Too . . IIUTHIRRII BIOTHIRHOOD

Legal Rejerve Life Imurance for LUlheram Herman L. Ekern, President

�UNNEA POLIS

buy Retirement income Policies··f,rom Lutheran Brotherhood,. Results are aboslutely guar­anteed, No other plan will le,we you as fr('e from care and worry. A guaranteed inco

.me

will make living a JOy when retirement years are reached. Pacific Luthera. College Clifford Olso., Age.t

--- -- - .--� . -=� . . ....,. ...... """"'""'"

J\IIXNESOTA

Parkland. WashinCJton

Build Your Estate Now!

Your Future Starts Today!

\ ... I

I ' , I ' I " I

PA.GE FOUR PACIFIC LUTHERAN COLLEGE March 22. 1945

Tnt' W";!:� of PL-C·� fa,not.� f.isn if th-al did»·, ",,0.-'-. th4!re ",ar. ;I, .o;IIUP,\..: .. �tlrt' � .. )I\ltiol,-al11ptltalioll' pond. llsually peact"iul and placid with

l i ly pad ... tnrnt'd sllddt'nly l'tormy One rect'nt Tuesday afternoon. \Vhatever· lIlt' argllmt'nt �Iween L O I S TOLLFELDT and E D BE R �DT. it Ill\l!'t h,, \.t beell a l.:no\, that the " di5h ran away with the

�pOOII ·· ;\nel in the g,rh,· dorm a �imilar situation reTllain� a lI'y�t('ry \VHf) ran away with di!'Ilt'"� from the fudj,!"e kitl' h (' n ? " \\·e l.: n o w the�·'rt' cOII\,eni·­ent. gi rls. bm how about returning them

heated onto, for campus strol1t'r� found Iht' tW(1 coolin/.": each other III a spirited �t'a-battle knee dt'cp in the lily pOlld Thc fol1owmg day, her roommate: had to give LOIS her food i n bed. E D de-

Eastvold Returns ( Continued from P&&:e One)

COlllpl('led its pled�l' of $40.000 th('" \'·M F of tht' :\IIIt'rican Lutheran Chureh ha� reached ;t� goal ' of $JO,(O); the Co­lumbia ConfNcnce of the: AU){listana Synod ha� pled�ed its qllota of $10.000. Tht' Tacoma apl)eal hal' alrcady Tletted �.OOO and the commitlce i� confident ttTat the filII goal of $1 75,000 ..... ill be reached dllring the YC-:1r.

In addition t('l the�e: al'l'eaI5. the drive for the refurbishing of roon15 has netted :;0 plcdgcs ill $40) each. The cOllll11 ittee

Lute Lassies

nics a resuiting cast' of ""Il('ezes. ·· hut -hut '1uick � ' i s appealing for 45 addilional refurbish­wt' ha'·t' our OWI1 opinions. \{ama al- -\.Il(\lher m,·"lery. I s it �arlic? Is i t ing pledges to COl11plele Iht' 95 dormi­ways warn('t"! us about gettin.� w�t ft'c t " uhacca' \\·h.1t is it} Thc It"!elltity of tory rooll1� which will include Ihe two

Failing ill a fourth fjUarter rally, Pflue)( cr'� FI�;\" w('"r�:.o dde�ted by Kaaland'.1 Kid!' _>0-18 in ihe final j,!"alll(" of the w. A . �\. basketball tOllrnam('nt. TIle: game: wa!' fa�t and flJrimu, with freque:nt pile­UI)�· and wa� witnesst'd by a large: crow,I. The FIca!' held a t\eeided lilargill of 5-1 al the end of th� fint (IUartrr, but a dctt'rmined push by the: Kid!' brought the:m Ih(" lead at the half 1-'-9. The game wu nip and luck Ihree minutes before the end of Int' game with the score tied al 1ft all. !\ ba�kct by Kaaland of the: f\ids hrought the score 10 20- 1 8 and th(" t\ids held that lead until the final whi5tle: �ounll�d.

\\·nil(' \q>·r(' talkin� aho\1l watt'r. rc- thai aromatiC. leaf�· mateoal fOllnd in, lop Horics of Old �Iain \\·;Ih other

memi">t:r how wet it was on Mardi 1-" around. and undt'r Ihe dumped heds of additional gift". Ihe total Golden 'l1hilec 11 e\"t'll hailed part of the da\". Cold the GL' LH Al1GENS and M ET Z G E H S goal ;s $650,000.

. OAKES though it wa�. G R .-\.CE t\Xt·TZF.� is -lil1 a moot Qu('�tion. It e\'el1 �;t1h- Dllrin� li1(' past I H ll1ol1th�. Prc�ident " nd J.-\'C;";: I E V E R T R E E S somehowrlt,· ordin.1te� Ihe problem of who dumped Easlvolrl has tra\'eled nearl�' 50.{X)O miles \"t'lop{'d a l11erlllaid-Ill{)(){\ and :lclually the heels

APPAREL

went swimmi l1R in Spall<l.\\"<lY Lakc. How wal' the watn' Just what do YOl"

think' ·\lonl1: that "allle line :I n' fi'·r co-ed�

who. in Ihe middle "f \larch. are mak ll1c 1, lal1l' f,)r tht'ir HllTllll('T '·i1cat,on R E T· TY K E !'oi WO R T H Y . M.-\.RG.-\. R ET F L I . l S. LOl' I S F TOLLF El.DT. :\R­DYS H R ED\"OLD. and LO I S TOLL ·

(lne thill!or that �irl� can alway� �Celll i� C<l.lltiy. AnI! did thcir cye� pop whell R \ ' n y PETERSO:-'" ("c\'ealed a whole

l"kv\: n( Hcr�he)' bars. with almonds. Oh to he 111 U L Ll A � H EG G E M · S �hoe� Lllc!.. ,· rnOlllmatt·'

\ l1olhcr "Icky gal hl�)�:ionll·d (lut with two hURe of(·h,d� rccently. ( Co-cdl' slill

FELDT h.1\'e hern caught di�clIssinR rt"lllelllher wilh kl11Rillj.!" thc lovrly tlRer­

Ihe i ls ani! .1nd� of a \H'ek at L<l.ke Ki l- orc h,d� rccC1\'ed In- T H EI. M ;\ S\\· EN-larn("v .lUSt alH'ther pT"'C'of that fc\"t:r ha� lIl(w �'d 111 at PLC.

.. prin� :\" (>H;t�'d girl W<l.� Rl!TH TO\\·E as

�hr lefl Saturrby ·fore la .. t for a tr:lill Tine oi I S<XJ miles or morro RCTH went hOIll(· to San nlego 10 be br;de�maill at hn sister·� '\"l·dd;n�. Brother ;\ R !\ () l . ] ) w a s cool <l. n d calm about t h e whole: af­f<l.lr-typic.11 l i-y("ar-old·hoy slaut.

Just thr OPlios;tt' was \\' .-\. LT LOGS­no:\. who s('el11ed completely Inst the pa.q t\\·o weeks with "his woman" miss­in/.": from thl: campu�. D E .-\.:-'; P I C K ETT

h<t� ot'cn in the hospit:d for S011le rlavo;;. fc>llowing all operation 011 �[arch 15 To n E.-\ � wr say ·

SO :\ . I \\·I\\'n " c a�kt·d J.-\.("t\ I E what Ihe O(",·a�HII' ,,-a". "hc answ('rt'd airil\". ··Oh. hc J II:.I !.. 110W� [ like fl"\\"er�."·

l I o\\" ahollt the fol1o\\"ill� theme song for DOTT I E \' I E\L\ � '

The SAGA carnival"s o\'cr : Thl: C"repe paper·s piled ill a IH':lp:

. The King alld thc Quet·n arc rcla�in�. ( \Iaybc no\\" 1·11 calt-Il IIJl on Illy �Il:ep.)

Prof. Mea/min to Direct Everett Massed Choir

On Easter Sunday e\'enin�: Profcssor Gunnar .1 . Malmin \\"ill direct <I. mass choir Irom all· the Lutheran churcht's in Yonr Doc nl<l.y be a cracknjack-

Your nur�t' may be a peach: �:::�::: �_t;\":c f\��

i�·i� �r��:l�

ic\:�·��t

i�\:ll1\� Btl! 1'Iil1 we hope that soon ,·ou'!! �ivr .\ i.!":ly ·· Goodb\'e� ··

. to e<l.ch.

. I will play the first and third mO\'e:lTlenl'i . from ··Sonata III -\. Majur·· h,- Handel.

-\no!her d(K"tnr ,� cl'rtainly j.!allling .

rOl'ularity with his '·kill or cur("·· C01'- 1 .--------------, (oClluns .-\1 Dr . .-\ korl1·� .� ul1:geqion I . BOOKS FOR A8Y D E L O R E S t\ ELLER a n d OA P H :\ F. OCCASION H E L L M A ::\ hal'c heen watchin� tllt'i� Sharman Bookstore w<l.rts disallpear under the magIc inilu­t'l1ce of a daily dabbing w i t h lormalde­hydt' ·'Doc·' Alcorn <l.ssured them that

934 Pacific Avenue:

O�n E\'e:nings till 9:00 p. m.

Pacific lauthlran Galllgl If you are looking for a school where competent. experienced teachers take a personal interest in their students.

If you wish to associate with happy, wholesonp young people. and enjoy particip,uion in pleasan� extra-curricular activities and health-building ath­letics.

If your means are limited, and you desire to support yourself in parr.

If you recognize the importance of Christian inter­pretation, and wish to study in an environmenr of Christian fellowship,

You are invited to apply for admission to

Pacific Lutheran College

cros�il1� the mO\lllta;n!' in \\" ho[e. Or ill part, 25 times

Lundquist Lilly Offer Sweater for Clever Ad

LundflUist Lilly is !'J1on�oril1g an ad cOllte ... ' jor their SllaCl' in Moorinl{ Ma:<t.

921 Broad .... ay Tacoma

Mrs. Frisbies Bakery

FOR nNE BAKERY PRODUars 7 1 0 So. 38th St. Phone GA. 1 5 9 1

Thi� COlllCl't I� Opt'lI to all studt'lils and I �:::::::::::::::::::::::::i ,hl, onto wriling: th� c1("\'ere�1 ad for I J l.\ln'llli�1 Lilly ·s sporl!!w(":lr will rect'ivt' :I �w{'all'r The .. wrc carri{'� a fl1l1 line of �ports\\"car for boys ami shirts anrl �weaters for girls. All ads must he turned ill to_ Corinlle Erickson not later than Thurl'day, �far("h 2!.

Park land Hardware .Icycl.,

R.palr • Parts

Pal.tI ••

'/' Blod Eo,! of College

F�NWELL.S

INE OUNTAIN 722 EA TURES Brdwy

PIPER FUNERAL. HOME

5456 S. PUGET SOUND

GArlaDd 6 4 3 6

COLLEGE HAIRCUTS P A R K L A N D I A R I E R

c. R. MARSH

QINNEIS AND FOUNTAIN SERYICE

BLUE RUSTIC Mo un tain Hl gh .... ay

MIN·S CLOTHIN. ....... 1,.1.." , Hats. 5 ....

letland & Palagruti 9 2 & Pacific A .... nu.

Tacoma 2. Wa.ahtDgton

ANDUSON GROCIRY

Parkland, WlUlh. GR. 8660

SCHOOL 8UP'PL11iS and. HOMIII RICMEDIE8

BROOKDALE LUMIER CO.

Mountain Highway

B�OOKDALE, WASH.

RAU'S· Chicken Dinner

Inn

OROllARD mLL on 8panawa, Bas LIne

Have Your Portrait Made the \ f\'I��ern Way

MODERNE PORTRAIT STUDIO PHONE MAl. 5438

9TH ond PACIRC AVENUE

SKATE AT

THE ROLLER BOWL SOUTH TACOMA WAY

TACOMA

<i#'.. . ' " .-� . �� . - -- ."

PAt;.II'.It;

L�T. �RA. t;OLL�G�

PLC COEDS LEAD DOUBLE LIVES; PUNCH CLOCKS AND CRAM BOOKS

:\ day With the working girls of p, L C. would obdollSly prO,'(, thai IIII'}' do manage to keep busy, In additioll to their class room work. Wt' Illld them CIlI­ployed a t �ulldry and "ariOl's jobs, including c\'rrything Ir("111 "bucking" al Boellq,:'s to selling cosmetics at Rhodes, Ask any 01 theSe girl,. "Graciou s ! H o w J o Y0U m:lIla�c 1 0 g o t o schO<.. ... 1 a n d work a t t h e same time?" a n d Ihey 'd probably answ�r, "Oh, it does keep \IS OUI of mischief. all right." Thty'rc b\l�y and they're happy a t Iheir jobs, Ask the girl who has 0111'1

Three girls ha\'t: hndl'd the manpower-shortage call al tht, shipyards, 10 .. ay nothing "f Iht' lure of good wage.. Mary Cain pu!.� 11\ Ih(" full " S win,:.(' lit'ssion as a pipe-fitter Illl'ch;tI}ir, Because oi her two Yl'ars of l':qlcriel\1:t', ,he i� lin\\, ill Iht, PqH' officI' of tl.c bltle-�

:'\" _ I I

Riding the Range In Mats Ford V.8

Th18 lettu _. "-c:.I.e4 ,.e.-wl"Cla7 {'fOlD. lin, To ___ , who Ie cbApuo ..... th. CKr18' .... '-en. OD. t.hel1' tOU'f,

Bothell. \\' n" Tues" A"ril Ii l, DE,\H PLC-ITES

I f �'O\1 C01tld (lnly SCl' liS II('lW! \\'(, 'n' all "ittillg 111 Ih,' ('ar 011 a side

S l n't'! III Bothell. Incidelltally, 1($ \jllih' t'ozy to Ira"el with �e\'('n p<"oplt', ';lIit+ ca,;cs, ('allH'rJS, lIlo"i,,!>: picture projector ,l lltl ,,(re("I1, l'tC .. in a f wo-d0,�r Ford V..s --on ),fS, H'ven p;)lr_ "i ft-et. 1o"

:\Iiltlretl Brodland �lartin fourth year prmt and draftin,l[ {il'parIIlH"Il t. Thl' Missionary in Africa pipes are going inln ;,ircraft r;lrr ;�'rs a l I s Last Year Student This a, III, W(' ga\'1' a pro!{ram 10 a

" ('r\' apI'r\'(' iat'l'e Jildiclice al I �saqtlah :11111 had a -,'r lllllpl'('Ius Ilinch at Mrk' landli, I !',; bl'l'11 101� oi fUll 10 sing for Iht' high _ch"ol ass{'nihlil' .. - we just ,':IIIit' fr,qll KHklalld, II her(' illr,d"lItally, II ,' !ound thrN' and mayhe fOllr pros-1'('('ti\'(' !<llId"IlI� fnr lle"(t fall. \\ '" have found al 11';1,,1 "nt' al " I't'rr hig-h s('hool.

CollC'gc (If Education ("<>(',1, II ill n'igll a" QtlC'ell �1ildred I o"l'r Ihe' �Ia\' Dal' Fell' o n our campus on Friday, Ma�: �, :\'Iildred was selected for tht' I'osition on Monday, ,\pril 9 "Uiddie" is Sel1i ... �r Cla�s I'rl'�idenl thili year and trC'asurer of the DRG,

oreselll l nseparahl,' Cl't'1\ at work, Marion Soltman and Francelle Schoch " I t lli bt'autiful hl'fe with palmli, C\'-

Prt'�", hanana , and other Irt'l'� �urrolilld­ill/-: 11�," \\' rilt', Earl , \hrt'll', t'X '��, rnlill Iht, Hrill .. h Call1 eroonli " h ,' rl' he I,. ;1 IlIi .. "iollary .. upportt',l h�' �e\'nal Tacoma Bapli�1 rhllrcnt�'; III n'(','111 " "rdl' and ld ll'r .. tl'.: .. i " c(1 hy th .. H (' \ \\' C . ! lamrall, I'r�'l'elll �tudellt. ,\htt'll� d"�(riht's hi_ In\, witll hi_ wiie I" ,\iricd ,L1Hl ;il�n tcll� "f Ih .. Il<llil e< lift- ,, 11<'r,'

art' workin!o!" IOgelhn a hall-shift ill the :\a\'y \\' an'holl�" oifice Francelle

EnlerinlO! �('hool last fall as :\lili� B rod­land, )'1 ildH'd changen her lIa11lC' \)1] Sep­tem�r 28. 1 944, to )'lr5, )'b,rtin when she marrit' d En."il'!'n Dt'an :\Iarlin, ex '�J

TO \\'urk \\ i l h I 'rore,;." ors Ra11ll'tatl, �Ldl11in, and Franck, hilI rl'�ort 10 Ihl' cily husl''; In g,'t hark 10 school.

�lo�1 oi our lill11' �(,1'111li to he tolkl'l1 l ip t'alil1� ( ,1011'1 huy any cheesl' ll\lrKers in ,\uhurn-Ilo ,'hl'{' � e \ slt-eping, �1I1�il1g, l,jllj.,:hll1/-: ; 1 1 1 1 1 talklllg, I" Influenrl' l l igh �c1I"',] ",'ninr_ tv . . "me tv I 'I ,C

Prl'sldlllg 01't'r I h e feq il' itie .. with Qncen Helen Anderson I- ,'nlJl loyt'd al MildrC',1 will ht' elghl atlt'nd;o.nls, two hal'+ n""iug \in'rall as a hllckcr Sht' ing heen chost'n ir\�m \'a('h ('b,;s, They are \\,o(1.;s a 11 1 1 1 -W ill I-! ." hll l in a,ldlli,m

�: l1�O I

�i��t:�I��'�I I

()J:-�'���t���'s

k�J��g��

I:�:l� I W h l'r I.' h nt1r� I plt1." 1 11'0 I h('rt ;, t h" I� no\\' stationed

1 0<1.11 Saterl1: Sophomore---:\nna Anderson, i ."(' lwnl H u t h Bicrk"l1 Freshman-Alice Kjesbll, i Tht." �rcale�1 pr0bh,'111 " f Alice Kaa.-

\ card fr011l l . i�h"n, !'ortllg:d, wrlt­It'n ill \' ' 'I't'I11)','r, 1'11.1 Ihal I-::,rl 011111 h i � " , It, " ,'r,' Wailinl-t 1 11('1'(' fur l' .... ,."a!ot'l'. :\. .. l,�htl� lal<'r " a rd cOll n',l' l'J tlit, f"lIuw' I l ig 1!1I0rlll<l l h l l 1 ' Y ,'_t\'r<\"I' \I t' W\'lll tt' lIlt, Ta,ry lal.- \ ill:!).!" . . ! �illtra and ,�al\' tIll' l -tl h r<'lIlllr� �I ", ,ri .. h 1:1_lh" _lil 1

(;111 ."011 i1l\a�i nt' lilt' Sllf11TI�,'d lpok", or sh{lul.1 \\ t' �a" -r:lr('ll I":<l'].," " , 1 I 'l" '-1' 1,'�' hCl" " h,'11 Ihn' �all' �Ir�, Y " I1I1g:

tlrillilC alll l lJ,!' all Iht' �11l,,'r hij.,:h'la� In­

\I ard I I \(, I'U III" OIi hrid/-:,' h(lldlll� l!tt' I ""'] "1:1\' \11' in i p ' l I l " 1 IH'r fact' I" ,;el' " llt, ro' II " 'I ,'r,: ;,:"il'�, :I ll , ] Ih,'n Illrni" s: arOlliHI hI talk t u tlk I'oille in Ihe back

:\.rdys Bred\'old, l land. Carolyn Hawley, Fern Erick-

CONSEAR lEADS EMPHASIS WEEK

l.l"ading Ih(' Sl l1tit'nl hody ;'1 11.1 far\1lt�

son, and Cecelia Gardlin, who work 01\ Ih\, \' ''rlh F0rt POl'l E'l'han'O!:e F" rt I, .. \\i" I� 1!ndt'r�tandil1g Iht' ( ; , ! , ,Ian" ()n'r, I)"' - l' nunt':r work inclndn dig;!!lll{ �1!dl pll r:"l'� a� " fal'l' mops" and "],I"ek,� aT �1I1ll or fnbacc(l" :'1.nn looking al tIle

('Ic'rklll� III d"W IIIO\\ 11 T;,r"l11:\ _Inn." , Col1 l i ll,lt'd "II \':l;,!,' 1\\ ,'�

,,'Ill! \IS UII . I holllo(h possibilitie� for soon pas�a,l.:'e are nol 1" 0 ,' nrOllra,l.:' in,l:t' ,

Pa .. ,_a)":c' call1,' soon , h0We\'er, and Rev, and �[r� , ,\hrt'l1� ;\rri"cd ill ,\fri('a in [It''

rt' lll]'er, E<lrl wrOle ill a ktter {'arly t h i ,

� ;:::;:�c , " , ' . In' il;�::t'' i :i:.' t ' '�c,,,'' LU DWI GS HONORED C"""',,, i". 'I'0k<n i " ,· i."" " , tu n ' AT PLC LUNCHEON

" Y " II ha" t' II" dOllbl l iy 1 1 < 1,,' ] ,t',' 1\ '� I 1 1 I ' ; ' l h i z i l l l:! " i l�1 1 1 _ , t h i n k l l l ).,: \It' W,'f" . , : I , ,'r ' l IC: Ir .. l " !Ia' llt';,1. The t r l 1 l h nl i l l t I I l iltt.-r I - Iii:,! i t I_ -lITl'ri,in,-: ly ru"I,

\\'�, uro\'t' all Iht' \\ay irolll I � Sa'lU,lh 1" K i rklanll-I-t 11Ii k �-a ' H I tholl.l{)q l\'t' 11ad idt \' (',]I� hera\l�e wt' hadn'l heard a .... "rd fr'''" Il<'r--<'i\ II 'I 11IHkr�lal1d it. 1 � l 1 l h l t, rl'i\lIl' <by.;; Ihc111 with her stn'

" j HI'\' ('un,_lar'� 01"'I:IIlj< ,'!qr,'1 , . , 1 -tlrt' .. ·; ).r''''Il(h � m" fl1ll1).,:, ( ) II T llt'_,lay ,

"I Tr"'t"\,, " f l 'a(li IC l ,n l h'T,' 11 ( ' , o l lt'cT \I lh) ;Ir,' 1I1t"<'lll lg h,'r .. al the "r{',l'lll

;01 ',\'III " h t l l l l\' tllt,y \)1'; PII a IOllg I,rp­c'r:11I1 wilh ,pn'che� '11101 "\'l,'rythi l ic ,\1

( Contin ued on Page Four)

( Continued on Page Four)

Leadership Training [n Spring Curriculum

]' \\ U !ea,kr.')lil' C0Hr-." 1i�lc(1 IIl1der ""'Iul,,�\', "II\' ror Iht, (;Irl [{e�t'r\'t' dill,s ,lid I h t' olher f,�r (�irl S," H I I J,!rnl1l'-, "re

in Iht' curri('ulum thi, "t'1l\,'�I('r P:,rt of

\\'I'on('sday, and I,�dar l l it' [,,110\\ i" t-: I till1t' (Continued on Page Three) I Dr. S, l' [;1'\11,)<1, repf{'��' l I t i l ll-t I h �

Colkce, j)r, 1 1 . L, Fo,;s, ,� peakillj:{ lor I h e Hoard of Tru,�leeli, alul Dr, r, P

cO\lr�e is ,chonl, III

Ihc Girl He�ef\'cs' If:linillg' "fil'ld lI' ork" ill junior hIgh T:lr"l11a, Six Kirls arc arl-

Coming events Sl'XDAY, APRIL 15--Cnoi r coll­

cert al Renton Lutheran Church, Renton.

T�;rT�A �;

nq'��

,R I L li-D P K

WEDNESDAY, A P R I L 1 8 , ­LOR at 3:45,

F R I D A' Y A F T E R N O N , APRIL 2i-Campus Clean-up DAY,

FRIDA, y, !\fA Y 4-�Iay Day, TUESDA Y, MAY 10 (tentati,'e)

ASB election for school year 1945-46.

DPK To Gipe Banquet , ;\ spring formal �allquet, planned by,

the DPK, is being given in the College I >in;ng Hall a t 6:00 p, Ill, Tu('sday, April 17,

Mrs, Ruth Franck will be guest speak­er and Marion Soltman toastmistress,

' Chairman heads decorations, gram,

and are Doris Jurgerson, Agnt's Roleder, pro-

Pl1ucger, rel'rt'sl'lltill)l the :\ LC. spoke al

Choir Plans Concerts For Remainder of Term

The Choir ,)i Ihe \,'e .. 1 i� planning Ihe luncheon, !-tlrs, 5, C. Easll'ohl also sel'erat ('OIlCl'ns for tht' la,q two months spoke, addressin,l{ her remarks chiefly to o f school \Ir�, Ludwig, The Ludwigs were pre O n Sunday l'vening:, ,",pril E, the st'llted wilh a S;dlman paintil:g of Chri st" grollp will �il1g al tht' Ht'litoll l.utht'f:1I1

The Bo:trd of Trustees in its 111el'tings Church, ReI , SV(,11 J, Ri�II'S\lnd, pa,;tor. }'�sterday and today discussNI a1110ng The Church '" Irucks will pick up the other things the expansioll vrogralll of singers al the Collt'ge, aud will brin),: PLC. ('specially plan� fnr fh .. arts and the1l1 !Jack,

\'i�er� ill jllilior hiRh sr llr)('ll clubs and attclld th"ir weekl� meet;ng�, �frs, Oorotlly \ 'an Slyke oi Ihe y, \V, C. 1\, sfCft'lary for the junior high Girl Re­serves, dircct� and aids the advisers i n Iheir I)roblem�, . \ wcekly lecture a t t h e " Y , " g-iven by le:lder� i n t h e 'teen age �ocinlogiC'al field, completes the cour,;e, The class gives a t\\'o hour credit ill sociology,

Litlian Th<.orleifson is a'd"iser to ).{c� Car',:er 81h grade cluh. and Thelma 5\\'C11-"cicllcc hall. Ilew gymnasiulll and girls' Prof. Malmi !! hope I" the Choir wil J he �on and Telm3 �fctzger are working 10-dormitory. �:�l

t�sl:il:

l: :ltld

th:I�I�(· I::;r.:l;�li: r).:\I

(:11�ri�

I;�r� ge lh{,'r in the 7th Krade I{ronp ;n the

same school. Bel'cd)' Rillings is advis­LSA Will, Give Pageant 1

.;a�I�m::li�l

i;

rS·t h!:i�

IllCYf:ar'� work, the i nK ih e Rl h �r;l (le girls at RObert Gray.

" The Challenge of the Cross:' a sa- Lois Dahl i� assig"IH."f\ to the Stewart cred pageant hy Charles A. Marsh. \\';1 \ Choir Ilil l !>ing a t hoth the Oaccalaurc- 8th grallt, club and :\Iarion Knutzen is bl' prcsc rlled Friday, April 20, at 7 : 1 5 in ate service and the COUI1IH,'l1Cemcnl ex- tne adviser of Jason Lee 9th grade c1uh, the Co1 Jelle Chapel under the auspices of ercises on Sunday, �lay 2i, The Girl Scout leadership class. a nOIl-the L. S, A, council. credit course, meets :Monday e"ening.;;

:\brjorie Edghill will be tht.' E\'3ngel PLC Given Scholarship from 7 to 9, It is a 20-hom romse with an,1 the role 'of the �ix disciples will be \Ir, Olaf Hal\''Orso1\, a member of the the last 4 hours coming in the delectable taken by :\riN'n Conlt."�, Eunir .... Ton'end Hoard o f Trustees frol11 Lo" Angeles, form of a "cook-out," Twel,,1' gi rls ar� -\Iice Kjesbu, Grace Elaine and RUlllohr ( H lIlltinl-!ton Park ), California, has g:ivt.'11 taking thi� class, Miss Slinsllliln, one Gulh;'lugl'll, and Tl'lma M etz�t'r. :"\'ora a $1 ,000 sc1lolarship 10 be used for Ihe of the gt'neral secretaries in Tacoma, Kjeshu and Gerry Olsoll ar�' co-direc- purpose of fostning Xor\\'e�ian culture, trains the group in leadership, games. tors litl'raturt, and art at PT ,c. Thc mattl'r SOllgS, folk-dances crafts, ,11ld other

The girls' Sl'xtette will prol'icle th� of il:lIulling the scholarship has been left items which are inchllll'd in Girl Scout-musical in(('rl1\lIes, 10 the administration, ing,

r .· ' :::_:::: .... ....... - -- .-. .. .. ...,...,.

PAGE TWO PACIFIC LUTHERAN COLLEGE :\pn l IL. 1'14.'

P. L. C. COEDS THIE 1I00R.I.G IIAST 1U:��':EH�E���:8 - QIl� acra-:.e�on Prl�f1-��o::r: f�nlte 8811 __ _ _ . _ � are Q!�rft ��Il<!.1!o_nn� Lemk� �t

Publt..bed every two weeks durins the lCIhool ,ear by Capt. Roy E.. Andenon. '41. who has Rhodes ; Inpid lI.rttn.on at Peoples Entered as seeond class JDatt"er, October 2, 1926, at the Post seen acti.on in N. Africa, Italy. and now Sylvia Blomelie. "Kim." Hopp, and Dol'-

Office s��J:�rt:I��dp�4�t!:;:.�r:

nnd��n�hg�.Aet ot France. wrilt's th:u he hopes to "See othy Nieman at Penney·s.

March 3, 1879. I you i n about another year.'· H e has been Ruth PRuel_. a future athlNic direc­IIDI'OORIAL STAFF ()().BDITOR8 _____________________________ ANlTA STURN, ALIOB BRUDIE

Aaoe1ate Ed.J.tor _________________________________________ Tbeodore Reits Sporta Reporter ________________________________________ Walt Kunsahak Reporters: Daphne Hellman, Ardys Bredyold. Telma Metzger. Anita Rotb, Rutb

Johnson, LO\lise TolHddt. Myteer _____________________________________________ Kra. R utb Franck

with the I ntelli),tence o( Ihe U. 5. Army tor. is launching upon her career earl�· anel has visited �\II;h famed cities as by teaching P. E. 3t Visitation Villa. Casablanca. Naples. i1l1d Pompeii. \Vrit- Clover Park. Her, class includes girl, ing of the historic cities of ludy. he from tht: 6th through the 12th grades l"Ilt'nti{)ns the filth and dirt seen every- Ten P. L. C. girls ha'·e bet'.n workinJ( where . . \ddress: Capt. Roy E. Andt'r· at ,Vestenl Stat� Hospital in Steilacoom SOil '41, H q . and Hq. Co. iO. O.M. Balie the past few months. Thl!Y leave th .. JIIJ8IlIf.a JIA.,. .... AGBIL ______ �����_��� ________ DOROTIlY NIJllHA:N Dept. A PO, n2. c-o P. M. Ne'l'>' York: campus each Saturday l11�rl1illg at 6:Jo

�tant JIanager ________________________________________ Ma.rtan Butler Nt' w Y ork. a. l11. and return at 6:00 p ltl. A Rell B_DeaI Seer8tary _________________________________________ Inga Johnson Ensign Walter C. Schnackenberg, '37. Cross truck picks up the girls in Iii,· �=�:: ��_a_g_e�=-=-==.�==_=__=__=__=__=__=__=_=_=_==========_=_===_=__=_===_=_��r�� Eg:::l�: dean of men and ins.'ruclOr here last morning and arrh'es at the hospital ill 8en1cemeo'll ClreulatJon ______________________________ Annabelle BlrkeAtol year. is rf,)\\" statiollt'd on Treasure Is- time for breakfast, which the girls e:ll lmebanp ___________________________ __________________ Grace Blrkestol land in California. Addrt'ss· Ensign· in the nur�es' dining hall. They arc Solicitors: Margie Carlson. Grace Gulhaugen. Rllmohr Gulhaugen, Jocelyn Lynne. Walter C. Schnackenberg, 5.0.0., U. 5. ser\"ed lunch and dinner there al"o. In-

&d�r�_������n�_�"_�:!'�:�_�����i�� ____________________ ..:. ____ 0. J. Stuea. Naval H ospital. Treasure I sland. San grid Mutinlen. Mary Everson, and Francisco. Calif. Daphne Hellman consider Ihis work \"01.1-

Election A pproaches Sgt. Thomas Rembosky. 191926Q. liable expt'riellce. sinc(' all th ree plan to 145th .'\.A.C.S. Sqdn., A PO 95J, c·o t'nter nurse's training in the 11('i1r futur('.

Election time again aproaches PLC. This means it is the time fot P. M .. S<tn Francisco. says of his recent Naney Fant is i nterestecl in the occllpa­transfer to Diesd engine maintenance : lional therapy department of the hospi­· '1 '01 happier with my work than I 've tal and Shirley Morgan and Anly. Bred­ever heen : the sound of a good engine vold in the ·psychological aspect. Thel­sill�n� its lmay challenge to mOllntain.� ma Tover. Betty Kenworthy. Evange. of 1ahor IS !l1tlsic to my ears." H e goes line Ahrendt, and Anita Roth are reRu­on to say that PLC will have an im· lar workers at the hospital also Th(,

some good-natured rivalry and a big share of animation and enthusiasm among the srudenrs in the rAce for next year's offices. Campaign managers

should begin to shake the dust from their hair and have their soap boxes

handy for any opportunity. Being student body president is no lark . as Prexy Mykland will tell

you. It takes a great deal of thought Jnd preparacion by the presidenc and

the board of control to keep things humming and everybody happy around

here. Bur along with the grief and [he head,lches [hest' offices include. our

leaders get a great deal of excellenr experience in org;"mizing rhe social ac[ivi�

ties of student life. (, Besides, have you seen (he pin Agnes received for hold­

ing che esteemed position of ASB presiden r )

S o let's have plenty o f candidates from which t o choose a capable

leader for next fall.

"Spring Is Sprung" Ah spring, spring, b€auciful sprin g � Or did I say something wrong �

About chis time of the year. one begins to wonder. what is spring �

Webster says spring is the "season of the year when plants begin [0 vege­tate and grow : the vernal season usually including March. April and May

in [he middle latitudes north of the equator . · The poet offers this:

"Spring. with rhat nameless pathos in the air

Whch dwells with all things fair ,

Spring. with her golden suns and silver rain.

Is with us once again."

A nother poet is differently inspired · "Spring is sprung. The boid is on the wing.

I always thought the wing was on the boid. · '

But just now. instead of "What , · · � are prone to ask, · · Whffe is

spring ? "

Looking Backward and Forward We have entered the home stretch of [his Khool season. When we

glance back over the year� bow shorr it seems ! Into it we have packed a lot of study. fun, work, fellow-ship and never�to-be·.for-gotten colle·ge experi­ences. We have seen many of our few men students leave for war. We have listened (sometimes with green eyes) to tbe strains of Lohengrin for many of our coeds.

It is with slightly nostalgic feelings that we enter the last few weeks of college living which will mark finis to the year of '44�·45. Out tears of parting will be reserved for tbe last issue.

Famous 4·F's If you have tbe notion that physical perfection is a necessity for suc­

j:6S in, -a\chosen field, consider this list of famous men and· the handicaps that failed to slow tbem: Lord Byron had a clubfoot; Charles Dat·win was an invalid; Julius Caesar was an epileptic and Edgar Allen Poe a

psychoneurotic ; Robert Louis Stevenson and John Keats bad tuberculosis; Admirid Nelson and Wiley Post bad each but a single eye; Thomas Edison and Ludwig Beethoven were deaf. Perhaps heading the list of those who have overcome bard physical bandicaps and risen to greatness is our own President. Only when an appeal is made on bis birthday for funds for in­

fantile paralysis victims do we realize that Mr. Roosevelt's robust vitality has been won against tremendous odds.

portant part in leadinR him to victory over post·war prohlt'l11s. His description of Christmas in the Pacific is much like that of other boys away fro III home: ··It was different Ih;s Yl'ar. as one c'ould illlaRlIle. for althou�h it was not Illy

first Christmas awa.v from home. il was my first Christmas away from the Unit­ed States. It was rlifft'renl. fOT almost all

of the eustOlu;lry things that go along with Chri�tlllas wt'rt' missing. I did not ft'd the I,)ss, though , hecause for Ihe first tilile in m}' life I actually sought

girls find the work both interesting and

CHAPEL QUOTES "Life with God is the outli"iuK of thl'

inlivinJo{ Christ; it is a lift· of \· ictory. Sirl is like frost: to begin with it prick<; :11

ithe cOllscil'l1ce. unt after a while, when Ollt' hil.s been wtth it long e!lough. then' is a numbness that comes which makes Ollt' feel comforlahle in sin."-Prci; S C Ea�tvold

and found tht" true rcli�iOlls si�nificance "God will give victory to all of o i Christm3!!. Tlwre werll nOlle of the who arc in Christ and Irllst in him:·­(1i�lractillg worldly items like Christmas Ue\·. R. A. Ofstl·c1al. Phi llll{'Y Ridge l.u. trel'S. �hopping, gifts, parties. drinkint-; tl1{·ran Church. Seattle. wine al1fl cracking !liltS with tht' tcelh, ;1I1(J I fO\llld lllyself reading the Aible, "God \Vann liS all to ha\'1;' a SI)irit "i

listening with r('\'crt'nce to the carols wisdom.·'-Rev. E. A. Larson. Tacoma ovt'r the radin. and thinking a lot of how the first Christmas IlIllst have been. ma." morn. a],.'O : rIOt the kind jllst around

III.LAND HARDWAIE CO. _ PACDlO

GIL 8"7110

·"Tht're was a churc� available Christ­�OIIlC COrner that isn't paid for yet. bill it was a church fashioned personally by the hand of God. It WilS a beautiful plact': the walls were green. rocky cliffs rising up from a floor carpeted with soft. velvet grass and decorated with bright flowers. There was golden light shining through the ceiling. for the ceiling was the Pacific sky, all aglow with the morning sun. \lIIith the blue Pacific ocean playing its great, roaring organ along the beach. everything was l':============:: complete and no pastor could have I r found a more receptive mind than mine that morning."

Lt. Vestal Hqhea, ex '43. was on the call1lJIIS last week with his wife. Vestal has his wings and is flying for the Army

Lundberg · Drug 11880 PACIFIC AVE.

PHONE GR, 8619 Air Coq)s. Address: Lt. Vestal Hughes. L':============� Malden 'A,AF, Malden, M(); II

PARKLAND'S J

PRINTING H01USE A modern planr in a thriving community (0 give Parkland business and individuals every

printing need.

BEARD

PRINTING CO. Baaement of P. L. C. Chapel

WbIm lOU want oItIce .� C. PlID. CHIISTINSIN

8TATIONBR (Roaeoburp)

913 Paclftc Ave. DR. 4629

STOP AT

�fjll}1i). for Dellclou Ha ............ Hot Dots J..... MIIbIoaIras --

at 9tII a'" Pacific

:\ )Til Il, 1945

MISSION SOCIETY Etta Clau!s('Il, pnsid('nt of \I; sslon

Socicty, reports that $49".Z2 has heen reo u'n'cd for our Madagascar stm\('nt through thl!' Ptnn�··a-�fe:ll Lehten Orrer­ing.- As some ho)o;('s han" not vet be(,11 lurned in. Ihe �11I11 I!, �l(pt·ctl'd � 10 lotal o\'('r $50, a� agaiusl la'i )'ear's oi­fering of $44.

L. D. R.

Mrs. J. P. Pflu('gcr ga\'(" a lalk 011 foreign missionar)' work in l ud ia at an

I.. D. H. 1I I('('liug, held Wednesday, �Iarch ll. OIl fhe home of :\Ir. and �frs. E. M. Akr('.

Also mc1ud('J in Ih(' program wcr(' (\t'­n)tions conduct('d by Thdl113 Swenson, and a worship off('ring, le<l by BellY

PACIFIC LUTHERAN COLLEGE

Spiritual Emphasis \Conlinued from Pag(' One)

("onc('pb ha\'(' been consldt'red : ··JUII� Ittl" Pt'�on of Pot\"er"-�fat. 8, 23-27 · "jl"SIIS' Conn'fII for Iht' Imli,'iilual"_

· John J, 1 · 1 6 : "Forl{i\,{,II(,�s of Sins'­Mal1h('w ''Q I -S.. "Tomorrow h(' w ill !lpt'ak on t�'·Saviol\r·� Trall!';fi�lIrattt.,,·· 11."1nj,( Matth (,,\V 17, 1-9 a� I he SUiptllrc tuding.

SEASON CLOSES ON BASKETBALL

� ... l:e.I I .... 1I "fIe.!ton h:tl' ('ndrd itl PLC. TillS y('ar·", I('ant, which "'<IS not II var. slty siluail ('IIJo),('11 a good �('asnn �,f haskelhall l'-"p('('I('ncc and fun.

/I('low , .. a Jliununary oi scor('ll anll 1">1 'lnls madl'

The Won and L.nt Re<ord

f'1.C 7Q1

\\'nl1 LO!"1 J j Tum Scorin, Total

()pPoll('nt5 671

For lh(' HI I{anws played th(' Lut('! �('ore<l an a\,('r:lj{e of 44 POlO!!!, ptr g:\me.

Scores by Individual Games

-'-:' '

Stud. Presidents' Assn. Holds Cont. at U. of W

TIl(' Pacific · Stnd-tnt� Prui<i('nh Ano. ClallOn of \Vashington, Or('gon. I daho. and Rriti�h Columbia is holding a con. ('r('nc(' fnr l'tudtnt I('ad('r ... on April 20 and l.!. al thl!' Um\'l!'rsity of \Vashingtoll I Rl!'tly Chfl �tl!'IH'On and :\gnf'! :\Iyk lan.t ha\'(' !)(o(,1l dlos('n a� delegates from PLC and all)' �Iud('nt h'ader whn maX h(' ,n. tn('Hed is invit('d 10 attend. t('am·ll hiJ:"h('sl 5cor('r, ha(1 an average "f 17 poin ts per game Name- Gam .. Point. Norde ll l{ 1 8 307

I n the informal e\·enin!' m('('liu�� Ihal have be("n h('ld I n Ihl' chapti se\'ual illl('fe�linJ.! lorin, h:I\'(' h('l" 11 di�c\l;;st·,1.

They 11;1\"(' i nc1ut.lt'd "Th� \\ford, ·· " l-'ailll," and ·'St('w:ordship." Ttllligh t".i (lisclI�sion will \'('nler around "\(l �sioll�·'

and Friday e'·t'ninK R('v Con�('ar will It'll aholll h is cXI)erirnces \ n " a h ';;lillt', ..... hich country ht' vi,;;itt'd in 19,?7.

H��:·sh.sses for Ih(' occa[COion wcre �I rs. Hl'\'. Conscar has hecomt' a pa rt "f !'I.C 4h �h .-C hor<l hr(,l1l('n P I X

Ih(' PLC family durin).:: his stay o n Ihe Akrt'. �Irs. 1-1, G. Ron ning, and �I r", \\', campus. li e a[CO c=xl'criencc=d all phases of I-'I,C

PLC our !>chool life, \·isiting ·claS5ts, eating PlC in tht' collt'l{c dining hall. and occuDyinll PtC the gUt'st room i n Ihe dormitory. He PLC

I('avc� Friday for Lewiston. PLC

51

II \lrChonl F"irtllu'!l Rnl'

2. j9 O('rndl

Bramml"T 16 100

1 0 65

F. Young.

S E L D E N ' S First I. Fleer C.verl ...

OCCASIONAL FURNITURE

L1NOLBUIi - RUGS

SRADgs - BEDDING

DRAPERIES

9U"LITY IHlmH. co.

U4 COMMERCE

I PI.C '·Chris'· ChriSlcn�en, .first - �('mestn PLC

�tudent. who is now work inK in Hrelllcr_ !' I .C ton, \"i;;il('d iri('ntls .)!l Ih(' camp\I;; re- I'I.C

.ently. PI.C I 'LC

Vidor's Market

40 4 1

'1 ' 1 3; lR 71 42 f'lS 30 SR JR "

Cr('am('rs CP� Crtal1l('f� Seattle Pacific KaPQwl'.n CPS Homhardi('rs I'('ac(' 1.luheran InHnanu('l l.ulh('ran :\I ('s�ia r" Lnth(,r:ln Romba rdi('r�

Oakland Pr('shyt ('ri an P('ac(' LU lhtran

20 .\9

4R

37

76

32

!9 .ll 51

26

21

41 �l 31

Folsnm R('(Ii!i�e

Ja('ch RosHI

Pihl Logs,i,'n Kunsc hak Larson Towe Bug lI('urhrrt

Gauo

10 61

17 46 1 7 46 7 4;

18 JJ 1 8 lB

7 25

; 18

6 6 ; 0 5 0 8 J)

OOLD STORAGE LO<I<£R8 • GRO<l£RIlI8

BROOKDALE ..... TII .

PI..C PLC P I . C PJ.C

;7 JR Oakland Pn:sbyuri an \ff' .. siah I.l1thnan '0 No Rest For the Weary 32

OR, 1618

C. O. Lyma CO. 711

TAOOMA AVE.

MORTUARY

Th(' Individual �corinK nf each pla yc.r IS shown btlow. Erlin .ll �ofll('nK, Ihe

Peerless Grill Noted lor &beU � PJuapt 8ert1oe, aDd. FIDe Food.

9 1 6 Commerce IlA, 9702

·7 LOV1U' 'I'� The alarm goes off at I"'('nly l1linul('"

10 seven atHl yOllr roommat(' hops out of bt:d ar.d ShUls it off. Now for SOllIe well­('ar!l('d sillmh('r On Ih(' on ly morning of Ih(' w('('k YOIl can sle('p In, ZZzz-zz-zz. Cl ang � Clang! Clang! Still shaking from the shnck "i th(' Iroll('y-lik(' waking hell. you?'· a(colnpanie.� tho: slamming of J

:....;.. fill or otherwis('. "I-Ion('y. wh('rt' are

""============'01 ��;;'�::��:;':�:;';�i I:�������������� I you?" acconlpanies th(' slamming of J

TRICkS · JOUS . .. A. Ie :�� �:7�n u\lllt�1 h�� �'��('��'f:s�u �:ilghnto:S

RAYMOND ELECTRIC CO.

813 PACIFIC AVENUE

BRdwy 1 7 1 2

ou.tomee � Tun!d0ll � 8etrpeIlUDN BROADWAY 1-10 hum. ZZ-zz-n E\'(,11 th(' brush('d

N I E Th wool of your blank"I" sfan'1 .� on f'nd ;u ea . orsen MOTOR CO someone sn('('ch('� JUSt olll si de of your

9 2 6 J,i Broadway MAin 4861 • door, "\VhO'5 going fo the P. O.?" The distant call of ·'Aggie·' r('acht'S your ear,;

SpecI.I ..... " .... ............ Girls' Sports Clothes Staedanllnd PrlC.'

mlllgktl with the tune-juggling of some­on(' III lite showt'r. \Vhil(' you are �till

11lIlftefln){ somethinl{ about throwinl{

�nmeone OUI Ihe w indow , slc=ep is ag:lin n('ar So you though I, But YOI1 can·t

e;w;pect all good things to last, The car· MAlE GOOD SCHOOL 'i".MINTS

See '"'"' at

714 Broadw .. y BR. 3862 penters have t o t'am a \iving too.

W as�ngton Sports Shop SEARS. ROEBUCK AND CO. 9 1 8 PACIFIC AVENUE

Johnson & Anderson .ROCUJIS • FLOUR • HAY • • RAlN • ne.

On the Mountain' Hiqhway P.rll.nd. W •• h.

IroMway at 13t1o_

I ALL THE GOODNESS THE NAME IMPLIES

HOMOGENIZED

ANDERSON LUMBER COMPANY 9802 PACIFIC AVENUE

GR.n;t. 73 1 1 MEDOSWEET KREA

J11r I LK

Your Insurance

doel! d�le duty (or 1 0 U I P r o v i d e . a monthly income for your dependenta 'in the event of your death; or If you live to retire· ment age, give. you a monthly i n c o m e (Or life.

�UTHERRI BRDTHIRHDDD Lopl R"",,,,,,, Lile /nwrance lor Lull.e,..,.,

MINNEAPOLIS MINNESOTA

,.clflc I.athra. Col .... Clifford 0 .... " .... ' .......... W ... I .....

I ljll lll� Build Your

Estate Now!

Your Future Starts Today!.

PAGE FOUR PACIFIC LUTHERAN COLLEGE ,\pril 12, 194�

D. Hellmlll; Wins Prize Zoo Stlldents Tra mfJ to

Te-! " " " 1,,. I- a rllJ<:!:,ed 1;1Ilt· Th,_ I � , ' l it' " f 11101'1.' fallll',l n·LI � '" Afton Hjelm 111., \\ d.\ . , .. if.'d.·,l .'111.' ir,'j;.hmOlou Dorie l h.\I"w('d �I"t h�- .. pn,mlll).:: h"lh hn Storaasli "IIHI,,·d lal(' ,'11,' II I": hi ,il1r;Il.'>! " rI _ l � " h ell �h<' 1;IIHkd ,'I. I h '· ' l l " h .!.-

cu, er II ,'a" qU.1rI.'T aflcr "l'\ ,'II �he da ... s, Leta Metzger nil all :,rl,· ry ;11 her wa� c,'m"ktcl� dre"H',\ and n'ad,· f" T Idl Ih1!l1lb wh,cl, 1"1. ' 1'111 .'01 ,. 1,l\lrlll'l'll't. breaJ.. fa,..1 h d " T .- her r" " 1l111la!t' Elaine \\ ; ! h f;r�I-:lld In'<lt'II':nl ir,Il1l \ I r � Smith. fl�I1Tl',1 0111 t h a I � h c 11ad I . " ,ked YOI1I1/<o:, allll I W O -iltch.'s .\ 1 1 an' tI" lng at IWT w;,t .. h wr,'ng and Ihal ; t " it_ 1I1t·,'I�· arc,'r.lllI� I"� I h t' latl'-t rCl"'rt"

111!Z". Brita Skoog, Helen Bakke, Veda Jean McCoy, Helen Marie Lund. alld Carol

Don ·t I"t th.·m sraT,' ' ''" TIlt'y· r,' 11,11 Petenon " isl\l',1 \' ;dor;a and \·:IIH'''"v,'r ellcm;l'� in "lIr 11l;d�t Jl1"t Ilo .. ·� all�l'l� for two day� "I their "PT111).! \'acat lllll wh .... ha'·c �tepp,'d 0111 in tilt' lal(" 1 fa�I,· \'·('11. Ihal '� (lll,' way oj j.!"II I I IJol ham fnr ion fad-"Hc;nil'·· h:lirnll� (Wah Logs- Ea�ter. den i� iootil1)r the hill lor all Plir rLC F.d� who are wil J ,llj.! I" sarrifl("" tlll';r F"r l in' 1':I-t icw \\-":t'k� En/!Iish C" 111-IQck ... and hl' �Ihltn f,'r �"r;II,1Z, Th., CL1- l'O�;th'n r1a ...... ('� haH' llHlallt'd :11111 J<: foall­�ds w('l1tJcr i f tht'�· eln ,'ash ' " 011 the ( d O'Tr re!'l'an'h Jlapcr�, HilI Etta Clau.­prnl'o�ili(ln, IOo!) s�n :111<1 Arlene Corde. \\'Cf\' rt'warded

r('t"('l1l ly Whl'lI Dr. Ranson a�k,'tl fOf ;111 ".l' \\ ,llld,' r{'d Jllq " h al Evangeline l'Xlr;, ropy , 0 1 thl'ir pal'l"T.� 10 put ;11 Ahrendt wa� "l' I" \\ hell wc �aw IH'r "ur OWIi � .. h",'1 ltlJTan Ella' � l':ll'l'r is pelTh"d " ll a 1';110" '�I.1cked c h a i r in the ' " 11 1 1 1 1.-<1 ' "/"'ni'I1\" al1,1 \rl etl<"� ha� lelephol1e hO<.'lh �('li(1 r01l1 f " rt·, ( ). K -" II't,thill,lZ I" do " jt h · ' (hl l l l� ·' Con-

h1ll limit th;n 10ng-di�t :lllcc call to !lr;,lnlations, !lirl ...

] laphlH' 1 1 ('11111all fTl'�h,tl.lll. " ,'11 Ih" Poud lot" Outdoor ( ... lass I IlI,ql1l<t 1.1 1 1 ,· ;l d , ,'rl;"'·IIU'I1\ ('lllll.· ... t Dr , ,\korn·s Zoology cilu!I w('nt ,'" d

" Inrh " 111k<l Fn<lay, �I ar.-ll 1,\ l )al'llIl\' �h{'rl fi..ld tnp Tlle'tla�', �Iarch 27, Ih('lr n'cl'!\.·d a 'w,·aler a� tht' I'nzl' f"r hl'r first h'r till' YI'ar, Tr:11I1l'inll alnnll the

�Il(' "f the � I " ,'rin� :'0.1 a_I :\ al1 " �' Fant and EIt� Clau�st'1\ suu- �lIl1t h;rllwt!l .. r" " ,'cr ready, till' "llftl'nls

1 1 1 1 1 \1''[ ad� " lIil'h n't",'ivcd hunorahl,' "lhen·"tl a rHlIlIhcr "f th(' ,,:\tly 111I�ra­I11t'!H;t>1l and " h id, , will be printed in .,ory birds. As larks, ('fO\'!!, \'hcasalll�, ,," h�t'qUl'111 1��lleS of tht· \ I � I Corinne k;lIdeer, tmfiu- IIl'ad ami witi!o!l'l'1l (hH'ks

Ridin' the Range � L" , 'nlil1lll'd frorn " a/H' OI\C\

pl'tldou" rcnt.i;I;IHl (If l'erp,'lUal Molion. \\'e always han' to look L{'!ure we .�hlll Ihe car d09r, to �ce th:rt Blomclie's led an' ill�i(It,. :\nlla .11\\'ay� \\"alll� 10 won­<in off into the woods lookillK f(lT h(lf­any �pt'Clll1cn�, jeanettt' ;� t\'ally a !o{lll)t! It'lln wril cr-ht'r latht'r addressed a 111t of post canh and all �h(' has t(l 1 1 0 ;� wti lt, " A I11 filll'" and S;L:1l h,'r naill,' I l jonli� always e:lt� IO(l I11l1ch. As for Mrs, Y{lung, �hl' kcep� bus)' driving the l"ar. pl:lY;l1g the pian" , n\1r�in� tilt, I'r'�­jCl"lnr a n d C(lllll t;llj.! tl1(' l\1nll('�'-S(l far

\'Tre di .. (:o\'cTl'd, studenlS hll�;,'d Ihem' sdH''' "j.[t'lling: foC\t�" as Dr .\leOril

j.!a,·l' an "uldO<.,r 1111l�tr"tcd It:c ltlrt: . poinl' itlj.[ 'lilt the rtll(lTitlil>l1. '<'nJo:, <llId \ ariD\I� hah;ls of the speries 1111der obsen'atinll �" pcr f,'ctly t"all1ollfla�cd was OIU' j.[round Iwst with thrce speckled cgll ·" that it barely t'scIIH:d Iwinll tr:ullpled (111

The pupils and pnlfes�or wended their way back up til(' hill tn Iht' lahoratory alii! c1a�s was Tl·Sllll1etl-illdoors.

JOHNSON'S Service Station

Rt. 3, Box 839 TACOMA. WASH.

i;,·" 11l'"t1te� "

!'added w i l h rtla l � and �('a rf�. Jo wl'\·e In ana).!{'.! tn hn'ak ", en

P. S.-�ylvia say� " Pon 't ever KO for I f allY '" Y" 11 hasch:dl pl:\yer� want In R'CI a few pn;ntct� 011 Ihc art of pitch­illl{ and catch i1l,,: a hall. jllst call "" "Jert" Rogen, till' (ll1e - man ba�('bail

�:;:O;:�:I

H;�:�a P;::�s���I�,�;h

l7,: �:II:: a walk with }'frs, Young or you'll find

1.1< 1 " e .. k il1 �,'arc h uf \\' a rlll,'r ]"rH" . , , ," rs(·Jf dragging a lol1� a bl(lck b�hind '"

�I .. all " hik "Doc" Nelson well I 10 " prl, E\"l'Tyt hil l� i� �oillg fine. \\'c'rc hal"­

OAKES

tcalll. "II the tw" _lllhhnrn rad,ar"r, ill Ih .. \l"conl;n),! I " Mrs, Rhoda Young ",irl .. · ),!;rls' :IJJ"II,ill,l<: r""!11 , Flnall� .'1),,,.. .' r.E iIlQru.-'' 'r :11111 F;r" \ider ,1t- · 111'" f'll1\ \lIced Ih .. ri!.dial"r� Ihal Ih,'\" "bo\lld

Ihe t"aklHlar wa� " roil", TI"l r " I; l \· , ' I)\' I� ·' , ,· I ' '1 , " . ! : l r " ' l't'ri'·lh·e wilh III' �"'rrh 12: il �hnllid Ilal'e rcad Frida�·, I ··'l n g d < ' h a � Inadr l, il 1l ","0.1 al that) II-" 1 3 l h � E""rl·thi

,lI� "

,(,Ill � I�"'l,thl� ;'1 ,]'e ..:.rls arc r""d,'rlah]" again I h " l'r"b

J.:'Y111 1111111 f,fl), p('tlo,1 \\ hen EIleen Mar-I 1, ,". healt'r� arc r" I1�('1l1al " Ill'" "" 'fl' :1I1l1

ken fell d(">\\"1\ :l11d .�kI111H'd I.('r k i l t·\, t11 .111 I� wdl (111 IhlTd 11"('r

Music·Makn·s Perform I Lihrary Student Staff I 'IC', ,,, i , ,, , , ' I . e "" ,·"",,,' i , ," . , , '

I Feted at Tingelstads' Hen .,· 1."11 H ,ekt" 1 �t ,·, ,·,1 1 1 1 : \1 art. '11 I "':',,1t111.111 2nd 1 ;.>1 1 1 1 . \ 1 1 "'r ! " Ii ll ' \ . " , , 1 . ' . 1 1" 1 ". l i l < r , I " ,tlldl'1I1 ' \' 1 1 1 \',1, ' · I I I .. r ,

� l 1 d Frallft'lk :"'('11 ",· ]" '·" 11,. , 1 ' 1 ;1 \ ... 1 ., t " , , , d loy II,.· I;hrary f: oCl, i ty 'taii : ,t II" 1I1 1111],,'r " j 'l'I""II ' ' ' I� i"r tilt " I ad,.., \111 1 ' ' ' " Il, .. 1 \ I i" 1 ; ,.,. l n " k 1 ' :1<:,, 1 , 1 ;1 0 1 I :r i

' · ( 'al Cluh , . f T,l l·,"";' : I I \\ ,'Yfrh;wl I _er ' . : a .' ,t l l ,'n:,,"'! . \pr;) I,. I ,·1111."1 .\I " l / r..: '·� i !. l l 1 , '1"11,·_01<1' 'I'rl i 13 . . , t 2 1 .:; I'. " ,

rl 1 (' 'I fi ll ,": "'l.lrk! ],.1' 101;1 .". ' I , •. "" " 1 : 111<'_ '''·,'r t h e rad,. , I t .t 1 " , 1,\ " k I',H!

",·kl>r,11 1 , 'n WHO'S W H O

11 .1" ,pi . . ; , ' ' \ I I I - t a u d , n ).,: I i , n I - I i '! !'I "

i . i l '" : , 1 Il,'TI,.

.\ ct l l " " I I ,·;tllll>'h I': l,< l d " h I" .. k ,

. ...:. r ] , . , larl, , I I In� hilt I I i" :\ Ifty drt· ... �t'T

.r " ! ' ; I. , , ,

Missionary in Africa I c,'nlillu('d frOnl Page One)

ler Ihl'i r Sl'n'ic� many of the natives came marching up to the hou�e �;nging al th� 101' of their ,'oict'� One group had. walked 15 miles to "salute" liS Some brought gifts ( d ash-we cail ;t her(') ranging from peanuts, to fowl, to bad e��s. \\'c received a "ddsh" of 12 egg�-:; bein� good, :I n d the Dungen (fello\\" mi��ionari�s) ... ay we were ex­tremely fortunale to recci\·(' so many good ones."

Re\,. Ahrens and his wife kit for their interior l'(.H on Ihe grasslands about the middle of February,

1·: 1 ,·" ; , , , , ' , \1 ' - 1 " ,<: ' , 1 . . . 1 \ 1 ,. , ( 1 ' . I ' to· "

H:\I " ,, 1,\ ,,-r l " ,, 1 · , 1,· 1 1 ,· . . 0 1 1 , I ' r .l ' 1 I l ' I :--11 1 ,·1 1 " 1 , , , , ; , 1 ,·, : IT I i i ,· .·, ' ! I ,·, ' n r l l '

I )t I I h l ' n l ' I I ),: ;, , , 0 1 t : l I l i d y and \ 1I .t ·' I "'1'1 <'1\ II o:re allll ''' ''' l l i c �!I('�I ,..

FEATURING STUDENT SPECIAL

EVERY DAY *

Spaghetti every

Wednesday

* 7� HIJG

;11,1Z a R'O<..ld t;lIl� anfl hope "'t' art' d(l;Il)!: nur jnh well.

T i l F S I ;\'(; [ N(j Lll TES, .ant! � I :\ �I .\ YOL':\(;

Parklann Harnware Ileyel ••

Repair - Part.

Pal_tl_,

112 Blod Eost of College

F RANWELL'S OR INE OUNTAIN 722 EATURES S,dwy

PIPER FUNERAL HOME

5 4 5 6 S, PUGET SOUND

GA r land 5436

COLLEGE HAIRCUTS P A R K L A N D I A R I E R

c, R, MARSH

A.PPAREL

9 2 1 Broadway Ta.coma

Mrs. Frisbies Bakery

FOR 1"INE BAKERY PRODUors

7 1 0 So, 38th St. Phone GA, 7 5 9 1

BLUE RUSTIC Open U nder New New NI anagement

SPECIALIZING IN FISH AND CHIPS

MEN'S CLOTHING For.l.hl_,., Hats, Shoes

letland & Palagruti 9 2 8 Pacltlc Avenue

Tacoma. 2. WlUlblngton

ANDERSON GROCERY

Parkland, Wash, GR, 8560

S<JHOOL SUPPLIIiS and HOME REMEDIES

�uun CHU:CUUDEHDU

IROOKDALE LUNAR CO.

Mounta.ln HIghWAY

BROOKDALE. WASH. "=··;""·==+5'�+El Have Your Portrait Made the I Modern Way n'l " L

MODERNE PORTRAIT STUDIO : .' PHONE MAl. 5438

9TH ond PACIFIC AVENUE TACOMA A car is. a cra7.Y contraption. con­structed 10 coax a character out (If his , .. h. I�===� ��������

HELEN DAVIS Smart Apparel

9 ! 7 Broadway

BOOKS FOR ANY OCCASION

Shannan Bookstore 934 Pacific Avenue

Open Evenings till 9:00 p. fil,

SKATE AT

THE ROLLER BOWL SOUTH TACOMA WAY

Campus

Day

Tomorrow .AC.l ... .IC

L'U TH E R A'N. COLLEGE

Remember

A. S. B.

Elections

VOL. 2Z A PH I L 26. 1945 _ _ _ �� _ �

N o. 1 1 ==�=� � �-�� �==-:::'.::���- -- -=- -=-�- ���;:=�:;:=:==� Queen Mildred I THI S IS THE WAY WE'LL DO IT! Big Campus Cleanup To Reign May 4 ----------------------' Tomorrow AFternoon Music, Refreshments Chairmen, Crews Plan For Afternoon Program Concentrated Program

0u�'ell �l ddred I . w ho w i l l feign oV�' r I he campus f'lT a day . will rl'cei\'e her CroWII at til(' hand� of Or. I I . I,. F\'!'� of �attl(·. I 'fl'�Hlcnl "f Ihc c"l leRt" Ro;\rd or' Trtl�tl'es . at tlh' annual Sprin� festival ohsrn'ed thi� )'l·.lT "II �I a\' 4. :\J,tncs Mykland. pre;.; cknt of tht" .q utknt hod)', w il l n'ad the offiCial �lay Day PT<�rla­,,1o"llion. Gary �IaIIllH__ .�on of Choi r

Dircctor Gunnar J M a llll in , will he c rowll-bearer Flower girls for Qtle"n Mildred will he Carolyn and Janet Cul­torn: Ihe tra in -hearer I� Lind;l Olson.

All of the furq:::llinJ.t ;.rc from Parkland.

The a.itl'rno0n ·� l'ntl"Tt;l inment will in­dlHle mUSIc ir-'lll pl.e!' Litlle SY lll ­phon�·. :"I sol" h\' \[arinn �(\[Iman. and

se1eclion� frum thr Rirls' !'c :-; t e l. \'i r l� frnm the I-:"YII\ r1;I� �l'� will d" a �[ay p"le dance.

:\n i l111 o" a t l(\1\ this ye:"lr \\ill be re­fres ll1llcnts 1 111 the forll1 of punch and cookies) sen'ed In t ill' �\leHS by the

Following" t I l t· rq:.:u lar �1a,' !Jay artiv­ities is a tea sponsored by the A, \V. S :\t least two repre�entati\'es will be pres­ent from each of Tacoma's high schools as well as those of surrounding towns. Quecn Mildred and her court will pre­side o\"er the affair, which i� held for

pro<.pcctive �t tld('nt� of PLC. Queen Mildred's ('ight :I !tcndallts

promise to prc<;.en t a delightfu l array of ("olors. Fresh me n Alice Kjesbu :lnJ :\ rdys Breuvold will be gowned ;n yellow formals. sophomores Anna Anderson ;jnd Ruth Bjcrk.an in pink. juniors D(lri!' JurJ.terson and JOiln Satern ;n green, and senior!' Fern Erickson and Annabe1l(' Birh'�101 in hllle.

Orchestra Performs For PLC Broadcast

Barbara Newton, Campus Day chairman, demonstrates the fine art of turning a shovel for the benefit of all campus cleaners

Bolivian Conf. Delegate

Speaks In Chapel Tues.

l Jr. \\'al!l"T \ll)lltal\l1. Whll ;� a fl'prr­

�eTlla ti\"l' "f l i te Holi\";;ln jzu\"t' rn lll t"nt ill

thl· 5an Frallc i, c" conierenn· . �l'okt, al

thl" C(>I1eg�' Chapel I.'xerc ises Tuc sday,

PLC·ites Take Part In PSPA Conference

By Agnes Mykland r.ast Friday after"hooll at ,'> AS allyl/lit'

walkillg acrl)s.� the UIli"';'rsity oi \Vash­ill�tlll1 C;)lllPUS would ha\'� �('ell two l'I.C-itc� . f'n'xy Agnt's �Iyk[and and \'jc('- Pre:.: }' Betty C hristense n. stagge r-

Campus nay. �.utdOOT spring house­dt·aniuj.{ ft·sliva!. \1 til be Itt'fl' lomorrow. :\ t fr.l!lr (l'l- Iock p. Ill. coeds Will blo!lsolll OUI ill ("Iothl'" filched froUl brother'!! c10srl I n r from L. :\. B.'s :\n�els) ;11111 join tIlt" bo\'� i"r 11\,> h"UT� "I COUCl'II-

Becau�e tht' usual 111 1 1 (lay st',,�;nll i� l i111i tlo"/1 In Iwo hOllr�, st1ldc� will be kf'l't rlll111inj.{ at lap spel'(1 10 comp lete thl' \"arI'JII� :llid SUlldry tas ks of campu!! day The u1I Iy pl'rSOII 1\ot operiltlllK at ,he hll�i1lc"s t'nd I)f a hoe or !!pade \\'ill l'roli:lhly Ill' j.{{' lll' ra l rh,,;rman Barbara "l'wh)l) ' " ho w i l l h;L\t' Ihe e."(CII'�· Ihat

al1 Iwr l'0111mL tt�'cs ue \\'orkillR

" 1 ' 111 Jilst a T' '\Lj.{h 111 Ihe d ia mond " is \\'a1l I .n��doll ·s the ll1e �OIlJ.{ as he and his Kalil-:" 11' \'0;-1 off the hasebal l field. Hob l.ar�"ll is I II ch arge of cleaning the vacant lot hy �I rs. Young's. \Vorkers ilr{' warlled 1I0t to cross M rs. Young's yard Illle�w hat d�s shc expect for l1oth i ll).{" ' SylVIa UlolIIl'lic- w;11 he found by the library under thl' sha. dow of oook

larllin'. anti Anna :\nderSOIl wil 1

(Continued on Page Three) work

Choir Sings at ALC Convention in Puyallup

Th�· srhool c hoir and �ext�'1 sallg \Vetl­ncsday afll'Tno"ll al tht, :Ll1l1ual M inis­

terial conl'cntion oi tIll' �orthwest Dis­t riC I l>f Iht• :\.L.C I P(":��:l I't: :::;::ra:�lr�II�����:\1

t�i:: y�\t;�I:)� tl::

COII\"e1l1;01l \",il1 {'It'ct a new distri..:t presi­

dent. nr. I. L. LudwiJ,t. president for

e i",ht Ylo"ars. lean's �tay I to sen'C hi!' Ilew c'''I �rl'Kal i(l1 l III �I.llotara Falls, New York

\IHi l 24. Dr. �Iontallo is Oil leaH' oi illg under the weight of suitcases . with

ah�el\ct' frorn St. :'.I ark"s Cniver"i ty , (,yl'.� g lued to a lll.1p tof the carnpllS. of Tilt' " Li ttle Symphony" 'tinder the cli- COll r�e) tryi ng to locate Clark Itall.

rection of Proi. Gunnar �Ialmin. per- Li111;L Peril . where he is profes sor of headquarters of the �o rth \\"esl Regional

formed at the Sunday ni�ht !'LC broad- ph ilosophy. and h as spent the past tWI) Con ference of the Pacific Stud ent Pres i­cast over K\-I, Apri l 21. Among the years tra\"elill).! and lecturing in the dents' :\ssociation After a l ittle wan­selections played were �·I ozart·s G 1t inor L n itcd Statt's :I!l d Canada. O nce a Roo dering they found their destination,

:\n](lnR' t he P. J..,: . "s who ex pect to sec thei r fathers at the cunvention are E\'an� geline Ahrendt. Daphnl' HeUman, Ted Reitz, Oe lor!'!! K el ler. and Lydia Lentz. Among the P. N.'s (preachers' nieces) j" Anita Roth. who wil1 visi t her uncle, Roe\·. Buten:-;hon.

Symphony a n d Grieg's Triumphal m;lI\ Catholic pricst and mon k , Dr. signed their names and paid the regis - .t\.SB Election Coming

March. The group will 1'1.1)" in PuyalJup Montano was COII\'ertl'd to Protestant-

tration fee. Then. hali starved , were Election of student body officers and next Sunday aiternoon.

ism and is engaged in furthcrin� the led downstairs with approximately fifty class representatives for next. term will other college and uni verSIty A.S. B. of- take place on ThllTsday. May 10. in the

C;luse of the Gospel in Latin America. iicers to the dining room for dinner. main hall. Offices to be filled are presi-Choir To Give Concert Dr. Montano's talk dealt with "The F'ol1owill R the meal. Dean E. R. Guth- dent, vice-president. secretary, tr�asurer.

The Choir of the \\'est. under the cli- ric of the Dt'partment of Psychology at and adver tising manager. One c1as!! rection of Gunnar ]. M .1 lmin, w il l pre- Four Pillars of Democracy:' The fou :"' tilt' University of \Vashington, spoke representative is t o b e elected· from each sent a Golden Jubilee COllcert 011 SUIl- pri nc i ples he named as necessary to good ("oncerninR "The Role of the Colleg$ class except the freshnwn cla!!s, which day, May 13, at eight o'clock p. m. This will among nations were truthfulness. StndellL" Later i n the evening tho(' del�· will elect its representative ill the fall. cOllcert is b('il\� sponsored by the two mutual respect, si ncerit),. and I he Good gates attended a Chinese program, pre- Petitions for nominees for office must Dorm itory Auxiliaries and wil1 be Samaritan pohc) He stated th.lt most

"ellted h) a large grollp of Chmese stu- he given 10 Dorothea Ofstedal by Friday, g"I\CIl In Ccntral LUlher.11l Church Ta- c1�nb from the l' of \V April 27. There must be twenty-five of the 130 000 000 Latlll \mrrlcans \� ere l 't th o S"t"'-' " ) " ,o,n,nrr �A"" on tlt r<.... . . " .. G U.. ,., .. " , . ..... signatures on petitions for the five mam

The orchestra \\ !l1 pia) one group of I

!!UII splTltual l) chamed and challenged tOpiC!! \\t're presente(1 Dean I\e\\house. offices. Those for class representatives numhers In .lddltlOll to the regular chOir students to go as IllI�SlonaTles to Latl ll Director of Student AffaIrs at the UIlI- mu!!t be !!igned by at least 20 per cellt concert America ( Continued on Page Four) of the class

p, L. C. has the opportunity and the responsibility of purchasing an ambulance during "�J � __ _ ..... J "'" . I the 7th War Loan Drive. The A.W.S. has pledged the Tacoma War Bond committee WM O� l.,,/�. to sell enough bonds for one of these "mercy vehicles" for the Army which costs 51 .950, So far. in the first week of the campaign at school. the students have bought S8,85

worth of stamps. The drive ends Friday, May 1 1 . and we've got a long way to go, students. to finance eVen a single tire! The campaign is under .the direction of the A.W.S .• with Elaine Smith as chairman and Rumohr Gulhaugen in charge of publicity, Elaine offers this slogan : .. Each time you treat yourself t o a coke, treat Uncle Sam t o a W AR,ST AM P," War bonds and stamps are o n sale every noon i n the fronf hall. A chart will be posted [0 show how fast we are progressing.

' . v, -------------------------------------------__ �----------------------------------------------------------v

. : I

..... PAGE TWO PACIFIC LUTHERAN COLLEGE April 26. 1945

T ID I T N T H E LUT'&'S Berndt, 39485953. Company A, 178th ON THE DOO ••• e DA5 IN TH E SERVICE �:: •• R.gt I RTC. SOuth Camp Hood.

PUblt.he:tue;:::. t:ro pw.::: �=':..�beC:�:l. J'ear bJ' I n r�pl)' 10 a r�cent M� M. �itonal Recent visits � s<'r\'icc men on Ihe

Oft'lce: JlQ9�O � Telephone: Gttan.Ue 811 1 re(ll\e�1 f,1r !Iews from sen'ic� 11I�n, �I_ C:lIllpuS include those of �OY Larson. SubeeriPflO1l prrc&--n: OO-- JMfI" ·V..... ton J. of80-n; r'l[ '-'3. siilt In flreto'ttow=:- ��nd 1- Roleom .. ex ...±4 •. Roy ",as

Entered. all second cl .... matter. October 2, 1925. at the POlit .. . . home for several days followlIIg bool Office at Pukla.nd, Waahinston, under tbe Act of IIlg two II ems. Delmar Knudtson. eX . • • . S Oi-MarCb 3. 1879. '43. has finished his combat missions al1d trallllllg and return

.cd agam 10 an .

is no" (Ining cll'rical work for the chap- <'go for further assIgnment. L«, who IS EDITORIAL STAFF BRUDIlil l:ti". 1 1 (' also hell)S him wilh the ser\"- in the na\'y rad:tr program at Greal

=-:r.S��;========================�=�=�::;if.���n!��: ��'; d ::�':" �:t",,� ;n 36 �::

,::��';

n. :::�: :,;;;o y,d a ,hon ("do"gh tw ,

Reporters: Daphne Hellman. Ardys Bredyold. Telma Meu:ger, Anita Roth, Ruth 39203092, 45Jrd Bond) Gp. 7JJ Sqlin. Paul PoUlIo. ex '42. one time PLC

Ad.j..:�:��_�����e_!_o����d:� ___________________________ Mn. Ruth Franck'

.-\ PO ';'='$. (-0 POSIIII<\�t�r. Nt.\\" Y ork fOOlball Slar. who was wounded twice in Cit\,. N. Y. t h e European Theater. vi5ite� school

BU81NES8 STAFF

�1t����:'B�%���� Solicitors : Margie Carlson, Grace Gulhaugen. Rumohr Gulhaugen, Jocelyn Lynne.

Rul h Bjerkan. and Syl\'ia Blomelie. A.dviser ___________________________________________________ 0. J. Stuen

Let's Be Doers! We wouJd all rather do a rhing because we wan( (0 do it than because

we have to. There is something about coen:ion which makes even a pleasant and good thing seem unattraC[ive. Wocn we are given the choice bet'W'Un doing a thing or noC doing iL we are conscious of the truse placed in us chat

� we will choose rhe bener ching. When our decision is tr.ade for us it ;,s an admission (hac we do not either know whICh is che bener thing. or that. knowing it. we s(ill do not care to choose it.

The matter of chapel artendance has been discussed many times. We hav£' been wid that while attendance is not compulsory it is naturally ex· pected of every slUdent attending a Christian school. Every PLC-ite knows chis and can choose between doing or ref using to do the better thing. Un· forrunately. an increasing number of us seem to have been following [he larter course. This means rows of empty seats in chapel. which in turn ne­cessitates bringing up again rhe "orry issue of compulsion.

Students. it's up to us. We have an obligation not only Co ourselv�s but also to our college to attend its daily devotional exercises. These exer­cises are as much a part of the daily program as are the classes. We can skip a class only two or three times and then we are in danger of receiving a credit cut. bu.t some of us skip chapel tim£' and again because no such pen­alty is imposed. It would be unfortunate if official records. with attending penalties for cuts, had [0 be made for chapel arre:nmnce, We wouldn't like such an arrangement. and. more imporcanr. wt don't need it-not if all cooperate and take chapel a[[£'ndanc£' seriously. Let's try to live up to the trust placed in us and fill the chapel these remaining weeks of school.

How Does Your A d Add Up ? In the business world there arc three qualiries necessary for good adver­

tising. Experts insist these rules are imperative for selling any producr. "So what?" you say. ' T m nO[ crying to sell anything."

I think you are. Here at PLC w� are trying to sell a way of life. Let's consider. then. tmse three prerequisites for good advertising.

First is "the honest word." An automobile firm claims a car gees 2 1 miles to thf gallon. When the purchaser discovers it gets only 1 8 miles. he will lose little time in broadcasting the fraud. Honesty pays. even in advertising.

Second is " ' the you-attitude." Man is concerned first and foremost about himself. You are talking about the blood spilled on war-infested battlefields to a man peeling an apple. If he cuts his finger while you are talking. he is more concerned with chat one drop of blood on his own finger than of the deluge spilled upon the battlefield across the ocean. You mU5t sell your product as to an individual. You must make him want for himself what you have to sell.

The third. "the extra measure. " ' is expressed in Luke 6 : 3 8 . "Give and - it 'shall be given unto you; good measure. pressed down. and shaken to·

gether, and running over shall men give unto your bosom. For with [he same measure that ye 'mete withal it shall be measured (Q you again."

Be honest. make the individual want what you have to sell. and give good measure. That is the essence of good advertising. What kind of an advertisement are you?

Strong Leadership Needed

COlll'crning his own adventures in the several limes recently and hope-s 10 � Pacific. Alton writes: " ,,\lhen we left here again for May day festi\·iti�s. H e

thl' slal<'s w c went t o Pearl H arbor. is now s.tationed at M"adigali HO!ipital a t

From. there w e we,ft 1 0 Kwa;alcin Fl. Lewis. which is in Ihe Marshalls. Theil we Harry Lang, '41. is now in Tacoma for were :;.ent on, to Sai!>:!n . . where we g<I\'l' II bril'! stay during h� leMlr "f army gnll­support III tile troops on the Island. VVc nt'r)' schools. Address' T-S!{t. H ar.,.-}' were in Ihe FirSI Battle of the Philip- Lang. $1"(". B· I . Bks 367. Lt\A F Laredo. pllir Sea. Then we w('re at Tinodan. Texas. where "'t' did til(" same as Oil Saipall. \Vr ha\'e also heen 10 GI:am and Eniw('wl.:. Ihe latter in the �tarshal1s. \Ve support­ed the in\'asion on Palau and on LeYle. \Ve were in Ihe S�cond Battle of till'

Philippinl' Sea and the B�t�le o.f For­mosa. \Ve supported the lII\'a511111 011 Luzon and we were in on Ihe China Sea Operation." Which certainly sound,. 10 us like going places and doing Ihings. Alton also writes that he looks forward to r�c�i\'ing the M. M . . enjoys reac!inl.( it. and hopes that he will contilllu' 10 recei"e it. Address: Alton J. Olson. Sca. I-c. U. S. S. Stockham CD D68J. F. P. O .. Silll Francisco. California.

Orville E. Kyllo. 43, is now stationed in England and is navigator on a R-17 thill has been on se"eral missions over the continent. Address: Lt. Orville E.

PARKLAND'S PRINTING HOUSE A modnn plant in a thriving community to give Parkland business and individuals eveey

printing need,

BEARD

PRINTING CO. Ba.ement of P. L. C. Chapel

Kyllo. 2074466, 545 Bomb Sq. 384 BO

m!) I ;=============: Gr .. A PO 557, coo P. M . . N. Y. C. I . AI,.o stil lioned i n England, now for THE NEWEST, LATEST

16 monlhs. is Robert Reitz. ex '42. hro-ther of Ted Reitz. Robert was on fur- RECORDS 101lf{h to Scotland durinp; the firsl part and SHEET MUSIC of �-I arch. Address: Cpl. Rohert H. TED HOWN MUSIC !�l· llz. J919.1322. 307 51a. Compo Sf'!.. ,, 1121.-23 -Broadway �!�r(: 1 .1J. ,'-0 r. �f.. N . Y. C. �'h'w 1 '--....;---...;..---------'

Ed Berndt and "Gi%%" Rolin. room­l11all·,. !wrt' till' fir�1 �em ... �ler. and hOlh

trol11 Cas!! ... Hock. are !lOW in Ihl' in­tan trv of th ... U. S. army. �tiles apart. thev Ml' receiving Ihe same type of tr:,in'lll.( . :\ddre� !'; : p,,1. Edward G. \V. ]{o,.ill. J94R5�9. Company B. 77th In­bntry Traininl{ Battalinn, Camp Rob- I ,-------------, �rt�. California. :\ddress: Edward H .

Where'd You Get It?

It's a Dilly!

The answer's simple

at

bundquisi-blUg TOGS

For Ed and Coed <., RUlt Building S

.IIIiLAND HAlDWAa. CO. 9M8 PACIlI'IO

OR. 8'180

Lundberg Drug 11830 PACIFIC AVE.

PHONE GR. 8.519

..- ..... ...... - ­c. Fan. CHalSTINSIN STATIONJIR (Rosenburg.)

9 1 3 PacUlc Ave, DR . • 629 Far a.way on the horizon a black speck appears: closer and closer it draws. uneil apparent to all. it becomes a flock of birds in V -formation. Where are [hey going? Who told [hem to go? We don't know, but it is evidene that they are going some place in a very determined fashion and that emy I�;:;;;;�;:;;�:;;:;;;;�;;;;;;;��I trust their leader anc follow him closely. I I p ___ ............... __ ........ " Spring, along with seasonal items has brought election time to the student body, the time when leaders must be' chosen. leaders who can be trusted and followed. Like birds we must have leaders who are strong and who haVe'\initiative and 'determination,

M06t of all. our lea.ders must have a goal and have the courage to set out for it, disregarding the wide open spaces that intervene. On election day� look over the roster and think twice befpre you vote!

1 3. 1 3 2 hours plus ! ! That ma.ny hour� are put in under instructors' guidance before one "finishes" college. Man must be an exceedingly ignorant creature to warrant that much attention from [he wise.

H WJ G will remain open

Wednesday evenings until 9:00

STUDENT SPECIAL EVERY DAY

STOP AT

U � rl l' ] :J �� :.J _,1 � fw �. H"' ....... Hot Dot. J ...... MII ........

French Friea at

9tIo and 'aclflc

I

I 1

,.

0'

... ,

\prd 16. 19-15 PA.ClFIC LlJTlDlRAN COI...LEGE

Big Campus Cleanup A I. 'JR . . \D(?G Girls Will Hold ( Continued from page one) The Fin! Methodi�t Church in Sum� Jf eekend H()1,j$eporty

, ·"T�id(" the chapel Annie Lien and ner W<IS the lIetiing f� the wedd ing early . . \ hOllSe�artv at Clur Lake. E.'lton-h"r'i� He' Roing to paint the bus shelter. this month of Miss Mary Trillou to Sd- Ville, IlronllS("s

,to make May II . 12 and f}w (lil ly worry is that the whole gronp mOlr Orville Stor:la�li. '..JO. The hride is I J ol1";landlllg lor the Delta Rho Gam­

IllJ.V h':w(" on the first bus that stOps. the daughter of :.oi r. and �Ir� Cecil E. mas alonK with :\frs. :\nna Enge. PL C r: Ht �idt'. \Vest side, a l l around Old Tribau of Sumner. a n d t o C'

'groom I S

bookke.",p<"r. a n d H e l e n Blomelie. Golrl­

\I alll. will h(' ,in charge of Ftm;ce Tor- tilt' son of \fr. and �I rs. \V T. Stor- en JubIlee secretary. who WIll C"halX'rone \ " nd Carol Elefson and entol1ralZe. re- a:\.odi of Parkland. the gronD. 'I,efll\"ely I var Pihl and workers w i l l

�{iss Carol Peterson w a s lI1a1(1 of hon-DRG Dreliident. Betty Christenson. is

pr,'part' the backltrol1nd for �hy Day. gell('ral chairmall. Heading the food \ l h(""rt h:uhn can b(' found in his usnal or and among th(' ush('r� were Stan Dahl eOTllmittee are DorIS Rarnhart ,lnd �.h.ri­hahltat ci tile kicking post anc1 surround- '3j and Donald Daniels. H . S. ·4 \ . of IYII jenk('llS. Parklan(J. ;\t the r('C"eption th<l.t folJow('d '�'�('::rr�i��

d(':

.itchen Crew is headed by in th(' chllrch parlors. -400 gnests at-

\ iter much Qrell!101lS lahor. we:l!hC"r tendN\. �-{r. and �� rs. Stor:lasli are now pt'fnl1ttill�. �\lpper will be �ef\,t"d on the at h-omC" in Parkland. bwn

:\ movie w ill h (' shown i n t h e chapel :!itt"f th(" l''''("lling me;!.1 and then eyer), ' iood y '1"111 gather around a honilrl' in i 'LC'� hack yarrl. Entertainment for tll(" honfire program is h('ing plannt'd h,' RlI mohr Gulhal1gen and Joan Sater"

GO WHERE THE S T U D ENTS GO

LSA Pageant Presented " T he Ch:lIlC'ngt' of the CrosS:" a sacred

l'aJ,:{'l1t was gi ven Friday e,·C'ninll. :\pril 2\1. :It 8 '00 ill the Cnllegl' Ch,lllt'\. The paKearll. (It'pit-tinK tht' cnncl'ption" of "'I" disc ip!l's ;!.h�H1t rrn"s-I�'anllg". wa"' presented 1I11(ler the auspices of the LS:\ cOllcil. Gerry Ohon and ::-.iora r;:jesbu

(",,-dirt'c t()r�

"GIG" SVARE VISITS

The Mystery of the Incurable Borrower

Ha ... e you e\'er? - Opened your dr;!.\\"­e r and founrl your pearls missing-re-ach­

cd for (he hlueing and discoveff'd II drained? - Started an ironing. looked for your pre�s cloth. couldn't find it ilny where" ? - Gone to the shelf to get )"ou an apple - \\"h('re in tl\t· hl'ck d id y"ur

food disappea r � - Pickt'cl up your 11<)tt'­hook to get you �omt: paper - 1 " 111 "t't· tl111{ tired of thi � ( Set'. do you ht'ar'

I f yOIl are tilt' " inim oi �Il("h circum­"l:U\("(·S. �tnp iussing" and fuming. J u � t

KO arnund tn vour l1e-ighbor-a dear nne .

L�4t,Ld4 I ; " r h a r t 1 ··C,q :.(· 1 Svare. l''' "2. 1111)St likely . who'lI um-over the prop-

Where the smartest Sportswear is found

Rust Building Tacoma

S E L D E N ' S Flnt I. Floor eoverl ...

OC�ASIONAL FURNITURE

LINOLEUM - RUGS

SHADES - BED.!>ING

DRAPERIES

\rrny .\I r Corps l ielltl'n:l.nt, , i"iteri PLC l'rtie:'. ('a(" h and en'ry one. She'll Hlltter

\\·t·dne�day. :\pri l 25 ·\ftt'r hi s I S-day all1l stam111er and say that she's ,.,Orry furlough " Gig"" will report tn H and.) sh(' h;!."I1·t returned them all to you he-Fidd to instruct navij.(ation

Donald Svare. a brother, is in Italy WIth (hl' ski-troop". Roo. another broth­er i:, a first lieutenant and iig-hter pilot ; n thl.' South Pacifi('.

Peerless Grill Noted, for their �

I'Pompt -..... ODd I'IDe _ 916 Commerce )lA, 970Z

Victor's Market OOLD STORAGE I.OOKIDR8 • oROOERlBl8 HBA.'I'8 .

BROOKDALE GR, 8 U 8

c. O. Lynn Co.

forl'. You 'l l answer her kindly and s:\y. " That's all right. dl:'ar " hut IlTldt'r your breath you are making pronollnco:­rll('nts.

:\nd the worst of it is. it will happen again - and you can't do a thing ahout it . For there'� one in every dor111 the incurable borrower the eternal Communist - who never will learn that �h:lrp ed.l(l:' oi distinction between M I � E and T H I N E.

OUR JANITOR

\ �'Iueaky door. a wa:dess floor. :\ loosened hinge, a torn oir fringe.

For the�e you'll find an arhWCf kind .·\nd ('\"t'ry timt' ,1 nlfl'

"'here an' t il,' 11<111 .. -\\ hefl' arl' tlw pai l .< '

\\·lle r,· i� t h e hrnnTT"\ \ l l de:lll my rnom ' jll�t a�k h1l11 now. a n d then s<l1l 1eho\\ H I" 1 1 f ind tIlt" prnpl:'r <"lIre.

P A.GC TIlll&II

Baseball i� in the air' Turnouts ha"e been called Cor W.A . . J.... members and the tournament w1l1 begin when teaTll� arc ("hoscn. jean Loy\'old is ba�('ball mana�cr and umpire. The tire-tracked field ha:, caused :I('\'cral twistcd ankles and makes thc softball resemblt' a pin­hall, hilt :1fter Camp.lIs Day we ho\>e tu have a 1l1c('ly le\'l:'l('d field. Tennis, golf :Uld badn11llton tonrll;!.­

ments wdl get under way about the middle ot" May . To qll .. lify for the tour­nal11('ntl' e;lc h �irl ill thc \V . :\. A . HHlst have c01l1JlI�ted .i St'ts of tellnis, N holes 01 gil1f ,'r �tvel' 1{a111l'S (\f badminton.

Carolyn Haw ll:'�' will 1l1al1a�l' tennis .1 11.1 golf. iIorHI Carol Eldsol�. hadminton

"Light of the Cross" Theme of Youth Rally

. \ Luthe r;lIl Y,)lIth Ral ly w;!.s held ;&t Fir<t Llltlwran f" n ur,'h SUIHlay. '\ I)ril .l.l. TlI" lh .. l11l' 01 lh e rally \\" a� " 1 11 th�· Ll)o:ht (�f t l1(' Cro�s ." TIll' R e v () L J"I1"'11 <pnk<;" nil " I I " w the Cro,,"s C01l1�!!' to �I(' " 1 11 the "'\" '11I1I� ., 111()tion pi<"lure " F,)r I;" il and C')l1lltrv.·· (kpict in� the work of 111(' rhaplain� 111 thi" war. was

�h()\\ 11. Hjordi� Rogt"n sanl{ a solo. A �o(" i:ll Ihlur followt'd

Figuratively Speaking E"er SlllP to think how much a. stu­

dent rca'l s ' This process really ')CCill)ies a goo.1 dt'al nf hi� ti11l(" . .-\ four page �or�e a .• �ignment re' l l1ires the reading of aholl t 1 ,400 words with another 72() word. from t h e half of the lesson yon ha" e 1<) lQ<)k lip in the back of the book. :\. .10 !):tj{1' a�signment in history. which isn't too much i n any history teacher's l a nj{u;\j{e I ,' ntails thl:' reading" of approxi­mately 12.000 \\"ords. Add to that 5.720 for a 10 pal{c comp story and 2.025 for a chapter of first aid. The Ilumber of words now totab 2 1 . 90':;

:\l1nwil1l<:" 90 wtlrth a 1Il111ntc as the averag" Tt':!din/o: rate of :! ("Ol1l')(C studcnt. it \\"0111<1 take four hOllrs and three min­lite" to vn'pare on .. dav'� fl:'adill!o{ assilZlI-

qUALITY KHITTINIi CO. 934 COMMERCE 717

TAOOMA A.VE.

MORTUARY Phone MAIn 7766

.4 Proof Reader's Lament (Jur Ilandv man: OUf dandy man I � then: anything slyer than a typo-.\ kl1 lgl;t of 1IIOps : .1 kindly pop /o:raphical error? You can read copy un-

"'110 never shirks but .::dways works til yOIl h;!.\'e i t mcmuflzcd You can

...,""''''''''''''''''''''''''''==''''''''''''''''''''� �������������� J ust call an him 11t'"t timc .. earch cvery inch until y<lI1 ' re dizzy lUll n f Irr============, l soll1chOw that littll:' typographical mis-

TRICKS · JOKES · MAc;,IC hap has slippe,1 by. U ntil Ye Olde RAYMOND ELECTRIC CO. 8 1 3 PACIFIC AVENUE

BRdwy 1712

CPef..aIIliN - � - � BROADWAY Mooring ?lIast is off the press It goes

Th by completl.'ly overlooked. Somchow it Neal E. orsen MOTOR CO. �hri!lks down in :1 corner and never stir;;

926 � Broadw..,. MAin 4861 or pecps. It's absolutely too srnalt to be

Girls' Sports Clothes MAKE IiOOD SCHOOL liARMIHTS

See ,...., at Washington Sports Shop

9 1 8 PACIFIC AVENUE

Johnson & Anderson liROCUIES • FLOUR • HAY �

\ GRAIN • nc.

On the' Mount�in Highway PerlclMd, Wash_

ANDERSON LUMBER COMPANY 9802 PACIFIC AVENUE

GRanite 7J I I

7 1 4 Broadway BR, 3862

discerned by human eyeS'-until the ink has dried and then it looms up in moun­

tain size. Mrs. Franck and the editors stare with horror - pun their hair and groan. The copy readers hang their heads and moan. Tht' rest of the issue is flawless - but thai typographical error

is tlie only thing anyone can sec,

SEARS. ROEBUCK AND CO. �,

_cJway at 1m

THE NAME IMPLIES , . , HOMOGENIZED

, ,

ALL THE GOODNESS

_ �II� M EDOSWEET KRE�I�I I LK ..... !II!lllll!11

PAGE FOUR P AOlP'le LUTHERAN COLLEGE April 26. 1945

Lf ."\Imer',. 1)<,1').; dlOp C��t:jl� � "0 l it W�'I11"" '� j'ri"jlt"J:'f' t<'> dtlln!l:f' h .. r !!lint!, Sf'crt't 10 dl(' akrl r,�':l.!kr 0f ,this colul11n, C0nl,I i,t be that hcr h:onc 's fl11lnlll;': hilt SOI1H'hn", Loraine PurvIS has man- away ,\ lIh her had an\'!hl !1 1'! I" II" \\ ith ag("d It' k('("p hl'r � t' n jor lht'111 S(llm'- L�i� ' � rhanlo:ill� her" what l'( a St',rd :\l 'l'ar(,ll t ly tht' ,)Lll'y thill� she likt's het\t'r than pork chops is l110re p,-,rk rhop.;

F�H th(, thinl time this year an orchid hr('aks il1lo I h i s column, for the simple reason that an orchill alwa�'s has lOp

1"0�'al TarollIa citi�('lls \\"ould lik(' II' prlOrily ill ti1(' dorm-Klrls' gossil' H'S· to lwlit'\'t' that thc uT1cd-np fish pond I S This time 111(' Il1cky gal is Brita tho:' rt"<lllt ,-,1' the summer weal ht'r w("\·c Skoog, She says i t'� f:0111 h('r folks been hal"ll1!o{ laleh-, but actll:tlly il i:. JllH part " f tllc pr('j';\T<ltion b('lng ma l1<- h'r Telma Metzger alHI Joe Heuehert ha'·C Campus Day . h('<'11 �lliifillf,: with cold� e\"l'r Sl1H'!! thl.:'Y

Sl'rill� is t il<" 1;111<' f,'r picniCS - (','1'11

if you han: t., ha,·�' ,'m' :11"l1e. Tllis hit " f l'hil ,,�,'phy wa� disl'bYl'd la�t Th\Jr�­da\" 1)\' Vedis Huseboe. \'�' d;, wanled a plC1II<". but th�' 11\el"ltahle "Muscles" Kuhn "'a� " I �ililll-1 th�' St;lle Hi�'orical Soci(,ty wilh lhl' \\'a�bi nJ[t"n History ("Ia�� _ �,) \"edi, 11.1.1 a plcni<" ,\· , lh her ­self nil ltW lr,'nl la\\ II -- :i 1a ire crealll and r,).,ki('�

h;1<1 a I',H!rllllor-dOll'n virlli..: <It Poinl Ik­fia nce . ()t1u-r �lliff1ing .Iormitcs ;lrc Joan Satem and Ivar Fib!. Dean Pickett <lnd Walt Lo&,sden, ami Agnes Mykland alld Arnold Towe. :\11, wonderful �prill.-: '

Th,'r�' ar,' ",) ·lrall�p(lrt;lli"lI Irnl1[)k� I"r t " o (It Ollr (,,(',b. Lois Draggoo and Mary Cain. Thcy haq' 11It'ir OIwn 111'0-wht",h-r� la'fl' at Ihe dor11l :Ind hicyrJe thr'Hl;.:houl I'arkland alHI TaCt'llI:L :-:;0

Coming events l" I L L.:I-:Sl).\ \ . . \ J ' H. I L 2Q--J) 1-: ( ;

ro:a ",'1ITII fl�r ]) 1 ' 1-:: Irn'l1 2 t" -l !' III Fl-: I \) \ \" . \ ! ' R I L 2i - L,l\lIp\L�

1 \. 1 " ail<.,- d;l�'" , F}{ I I J :\ Y , � I . \ Y -I - :"Ia�' Da)

\ \\ � [l'a i,'r hL loo: h �("\l(",1 �irl" \Y E I> :\ E-" I )" \ Y :"I . \ \" () - L U }{

M ntt1<'r�' i"la. T H U R S D A Y, M .\ \' 1 0 - :\ S I:

\'k,·II"IIS for I()-l,�--ln "ffH·er�. F I� I J ) \y. :"I .\\" 1 1 -I l\ U ; 1 1 011 -(' ·

1>;, rt � I-" I-: I I ) \ \ " :"1 . \ \ 1� �- .. \ I I -' l"h",,1

CHAPEL QUOTES

"The .':Teatl'�t ('xample of (Ollragl' ,,, JI.:'�1!� l'hri-:I PI',, !,k w ho ;Ire hraye real

DORM BOYS PLAN FORMAL BANQUET

rtl{' ;, ,,·lllIil l D. B. L'. formal banquet r,)rgillaltr �clu�dl1it'd f('r IRS! lns.-ht) wlil h�' ht'1d lLI'xt \Vednesllay l·l"C'ning, May 1. at � i;oo; I,'dock i n tilt' recreation rOOIl1. �Ir \\'t'iss, plano teacher and well knll)\" 11 afto:r-.tilliler speakt'r ;lllIong I 'L C �tuJC'''I', " il l h e t h e guest o f the "nHl­lshiug raq'" and will hring to them th� 1II;,i" address oi the cn'ning.

.\rling as lOastmaster w!ll be Dean uf :"h'n [ , . :\ . 8. Nelson. The program \\"111 11,.:llIdl' nxal n u n;bcrs by Lydia L�'ntz ;\111\ Afton Hje-Im; a n accordion

�"Io h�' Carol PctO:fson: a reading hy 1 1 ('\(-11 l.uIHI. ;,1111 a violin Soolo by Betty 1,011 I�ieko: .\ few r('marks will he made hy :\1 Kllhn . " I ' re�idel1t of the D. H. l' fnr Ihl� 1';1" 1)\"0 years. I.,., 1 I I'uc t1{'rt. h,lIl(llH'l COllll1lit tl'c rll;lIrl1l;ln, is takllllo: C.HI.:' of details. with til(' 1,,·1]1 "f I \·u Pihl ami Tcd Reitz.

ize Ih" fl' i� "'I1H'tliinloo: in Ihl.:' world I" ,--------------, k<lr . . . -�' i " ( ; r:I<"<' 111" 111'1111,1 I lcall .-, f " ·'\1111'11 BLUE RUSTIC

OPEN FROM boys, ii you're 'hort vf gas and tht' r\. ' s " J e sl1� ChTl�t ), till" great ';oncert ma·- A. M. '[il 1 0 P. M. L'nti l \;t." �al \1rda, Jil,'rtl,'<)n Lois a hea\'�' dalt' C0111i!1){ "I', ;0110\\ I h e ex- I< 'r . sen I hy ( ;'''\ Lnt(l t l 1 \� :Oln-filkd world

Dahl prdl'rrl'd h,,'rsd'�rk riding to dail� ample of thl'�l' dl" cr r,,('d� and �l't "III I" bring h;lT1l1<1TT� <1111 "i ,!lsfonL"-}{l'v dOZ\'11 1" \"Tri-:t'� Tradillon has it thaI i I' s tlh'�<: t:tndl'1 1 ls ! IIlIrl(>1\ -"ll1itb , H�'lhkh <'ll1 l.uthaalL

l"hurl"li. rarll 1 1 1a.

PSPA Conference \ fwrs. Holstad Returns

( C'ntin llt'd from Pag-e One ) Fronl California Trek

;�(�r�:il�'<:I:;I: . \�ti�:;���t

' �l;l� lI;�:;l

ka�l 1;,

'f s���::,� :"' r�" K . ;\ 1 1 01�lad ! ' I . L 1" '(1 ,,' ­{ary "f Student :\iiairs a t t h e l.." llil"t; rsit� :��:1

1\1 I"�a !i;�:��:�,

t"(�\' h�:�u

:I'II(�\a.�·\

:':;::"el�� of \\·asbinglOn, pre�el1ted "The �t'rT<'·

tary : " _ 3 n.d ,\nnt' Re;lUdin I'Tl' �i .k\1 : :���I�

�'�_';1 1\\'1' 'n'd: � III Ille illll.:'rl'H "f th e 1��:'I

.• ,1 the :\

���n

�ted Students

�I I ::"I rs. I lolstJd "� first �lopvinK poinl

:.,1;(' t�1\:�.�_�::.y ��airn�:n:��

gt.�

I1'dfsa.C:l:��(:l� wa s Sail 1.1Ii� ()hi�po. FrOIll thnc � h t,

followed. wcnt to Los .\ng"l'k .. where she attended

Ailer lunch ,h(' ronio:rellcl.:' di\-ided into IWO groups. one conSlstl11� of the rcpre­�entati\"es of Ihe large stale "clt\.ols ;lnd

a \V.M.F. eonl"t'lltion. Oth('f cities in­cluded in her trip W('rl' \ - an �\lYs, ra�a­df'na, Glt'IH!;lle, SJllt;l :"I onica. Long­Ik;lch, San rr;lnl"isrn, and nakland

tht, ntlll"f "f till' smaller srh"ol �_ This l' pon arri\'ing hO llie ::"'r� 1 I (l\stad q:lled g.'.f' all .n O�)Port\1llity 10 ,b�cus" S i �l1i- 1 tll ; l ! �h(" 1 : a o l 1I" ' l' 1 10,,,,11 �" 11 .l1 '!"Y a� <Ill' lar al1(1 . indiYldllal PI"l)bit-lIb. FOl l"

." I I Il!\ w a.;; 1 0 cnnw hark 10 \\ ;"llIIIgtOIl all<l

the St'S"10n Ihl.:' 1\\0 groups nH't tog"thcr ' "i""T girl�. "' for a hrid sUlllmar> and �hort hus!I1\'s!' !neetill){

A hanquet w;,� Ill'I,1 �al \1rday " \-t'Il ' !\ R" I C"n f\l �I(ln ·;n· IILlt campus cit-anll],

at th(' ::"Icanl' }lolCI and " 11 SU lld;l \' <la\ _,'Il,1 h l 1 l 1 ;Ind eha," f;Ir ;l" a�' morning . I 1_1 OS"l' de\{'",ales. w!tn . wished t:, I �tay Inl'! l(lr further (h�(lb"<1n and ,I

LDR Wi l l Sponsor Tea L.D.R. Illcmber;; art' making plans inr

tho:ir annual lllother�daughter I('a, which will be held \\·t'dnl.:'sday aft('rnOOll, ::"I ay 9 a l 3:45 1'. m. in th(' recreation room. Dor;s Stor.asli. gent'ral chairman, has as assislauts .10 LOI"I·old. in rharge of the program: B('tty Hoyt, dt'corations: .-\hOll Hjelm. refreshml·'H�. and Thelma Swenson, clean-up.

:\11 girls ar(' cordially invited , and those whose mothers will be unable 1(1 attend the tea may "borrow" a faculty

nl<' ", l't'I<:'t {"("IIll Position In a sludl' lll h ;t r,'!'<)r! ,';I nl writtell in _-\ major

RISER DRUG CO. NEIGHBORHOOD DRUG

APPROPRIA TE MOTHER'S DAY

CARDS

1 5, [0 S 1 .00 And Candy

wife or memb('r or other friend, for the ..... �-����������"'\ aftl.;'rnoon.

V ery studious E nergetic R esident of b0YS' dorm N ice to know

E xce1s in History of Ci\·, L ikeable S i ngs i n choir T inkers with Model A's E ats heartily D rives his own car

HELEN DAVIS Smart Apparel

9 1 7 Broadway

BOOKS FOR ANY OCCASION

Shannan Bookstore 934 Pacific Avttmc

Open Evening. till 9:00 p. m.

Send Flowers on Mother's Day . . .

ANDERS FLORIST 255 SOUTH 11TH

" I I ,' nT ",' ran' I_ liT<' inl!! . , 1 tht' Chri�­li,Ln faitll "-Dr \\. :"1"lIlall'" dc\q.::;ltl' fr,)111 H. , I ; \ ia ,<' ;-;':111 Frall{"i�ro rOlll('f-

Park land Hardware Blcycl ••

Repair • Part.

Palotl·9

'/' Blod Eo,! of College

FRANWELL'S OR INE OUNTAIN

. EATURES 722

Brdwy

PIPER FUNERAL HOME 5466 S, PUGET SOUND

GArland 6U6

COLLEGE HAIRCUTS P A R K L A N D I A R I E R

c, R, MARSH

.JOHNSON'S Service Station

Rt. 3, Box 839 TACOMA. WASH.

OAKES APPAREL

9 2 1 Broad way Tacoma

Mrs. Frisbies Bakery

FOR FINE BAKERY PRODUOl'8 710 So. 38th St. Phone GA. 7691

MEN'S CLOTHING ....... I.�I.... Hats, 5 ....

letland & Palagruti 9 % 8 Paclt1c Avenue

T�om& 2, Wubtngtoo

ANDERSON GROCERY Parkla.od. Wa.ah. GR, 8660

SOHOOL 8UPPL1J!11 aDd BOMB RBlHBDIB8

ClU= =CCCU= ccuuucccUC=

IROOKDALE LUMln CO. Mountain' HIghway

BROOKDALE, WASH.

Have Your Portrait Made the Modern Way

MODERNE PORTRAIT STUDIO PHONE MAl. 543t,

9TH ond PACIFIC AVENUE

SKATE AT

THE ROLLER BOWL SOUTH TACOMA WAY

TACOMA

..

\ .J.. " • •

E u n ice Torvend Wins All-School

Picnic

Tomorrow PA�. I'.�

L�T. t: R A. � O I. L t: G t:

\' ( 1 ( .. 1.2 �l \ Y 17. 194�

CLASS OF 1945 WILL I'SchoOI Picnic Slated RECEIVE DIPLOMAS Friday, Rain or Shine ON SUNDAY, MAY 27 1 Hain or sh illt". faculty ami �ludt"lIts are

( ; radU;lI'on arli\·;tll'� will belli1l w n h a I I I for a ti,me. o f fun ami froli� at I h t, all·

(" rmal r<'l't"l'tlt'" I,' ht' ",in'n by I 'rt'�i . ! �ch'>(>I� \1IC1l1.C , al �1t"tr�JlOhtan P�rk.

,kilt Jlld �IT" S. l' Ea�I \ ,'ld fUT Iht" I.:lke S\1ana\\ a � . t'"'lI1orro\\ . May 18, rhl'

Ilradll3lmlo: r ! a � � pf 1Q4� alld tlit . .... n .. jo[l, �tudl'nt:- will lea\'e school ahout J:4�

f I ' I ' and will Iravel h�' 'way of Ihumbs. cars, 1-���

lt :.;·.'ld��:.

I:' ��:I1�;·�I:;

I;:�; II�

a.�·1 �";.�\, I:;�: �H t and bl1se�

I h. �bT1Hl .\ n,l er�.'" 1'" Llii" <I�" �l"I"' I Thl" l i mc frHIll arri,·.,1 unlil 1 0''\0 will rl'r.lr�· of the 1\ali" llal Lutht'rall c, ," n' I I >t' wdl takcn I1 p h�' base hall, a bont

rd. 1\ i l l ht, Ih.' ha,·cd a,]f,.;t h' �p" 'lkt'r. ran'. WI Ilnl11l11�. alld tltt" illl' l l la ],1t- ",.1,

�lIllday 1l10rllill� .\l a �·

27. :.1 I I 110 .1. III 11I�,�

" " :1\ Trin;ty L\ltllt'ran ("ll11r .. h "rh,' R.n 1",' 1I1t" I� Sl'vllf." rnl hy Ihl' .\Sa. � I I Th" f]1I·. p a - h ' r a l Trlll q � , \1 1 1 1 " I 1� llh .1" .111 :-;atl'fll III rhar,;:.;: "f the maill fin:lt" a� It!l1r�I'1 �1" · ' · I .d llllh,.· \\ i l l he t ick,·!. i"",1.

Illrm�h,'d h \ t h ,· l'h"lr ,.1 t ill' \\ t'�t I -------'''H'''''" , .. "

" ' " c , J " . , ,,"" ' SUMMER SESSION ,

I ), "',,""' " F " "'''': '' I )" " " , , ' , ," BEGINS JUNE 13 :"rh",,1 , , 1 1·.dlH"all"ll ' I I t ilt' l ll 1 \ ('r" IY '\moll).: tit" r"llr�,'s oifl"r('d at PI.C " i \\· ;I �llIll�t"l1. I\dl h(" Iht·

�I.(":.k,·r ,II I .lllring Ihc ("(l11lilill �UIHnwr St's�;on \\" '[1 :,,11" l :r�.

I:::;:�;::r�'.

l l��:

II�;��:'::I��·

�\I �I'! ;�T�.I�I'I

I:I I �' arr !l Il n'l Ilrl' atl d �Cl1 ll'turl·. "I1�eIU"'�.

"? ' • "'¢-;

of A. s. B.

......

The

Last

Edition

No. IJ

EUNICE TORVEND TO WIElD�AVEl STARTING IN SEPT.

EUllic,' Ton·,'IH]. Seni" f. \I iI� de,·lr..t last \londa) 10 dirt'r! �t\lll('nt ;l i fa1f � for :h�' C')llllll � \'(';Ir Til,,, I � . thl' ",'n,,,,,1 li m<: 111 1 ' 1 .l." hi,'nr .1 Ihal .• J(i r l has IleclI .-host'll t., f i l l Iii,' "Hire ", �I IHlel1l nudy f're,io l('111

EUII\I"j" h:h I.('I'U a,"lil t" "" tilt" ra!lllm " .. inc .. h('r ,"llrolhll,'nt 11I'r," I .:,,,, n';,r .. he wa .. :, ""I,he' rl I l ITo- �la, I)a� all .-11,lalll. lre:t_Ur/'r "f l . 1 1 1.: , I 'l ' l ;, ,' 1 11" ," I I I malty or;.:-al1l1,;, I" 'II" Th" .h" ha. h',-l'n I'n" ilknl •• 1 1 . 1 ) 1< .I!HI ,-.hhH ,.f t he I <';al,(:'

dl l o l <1I11:"� h' �1\ ld('lIt� r"'llplt,tlill.! I i i ,.' re' lIalUral hl .�I<'r r, dln'ned rca dinK , lIl�d­'Imrl',1 "Ollr'('� 111 til t" roll ".1h' " i 1 i h" r�d 1 " ," 1 ,, ·t' t r.1 : l l I d h.i,t . , r� 01 1.;\1111 . \ l 1hTlra. art� and Ih,' ... ,""�,, , ., ,'<111,':111< 111, I )r J ' �I 'IHY "Ibn � 1I"Jt ... t � In Ihe i'e],i of lib·

e K. " r t'lI� ,.1 �I illllt'apoli�. " '( l"rllli ' e t'ral ;,rh ;11111 ",Iucat,on h a l t' hl'("11 listed,

I

\\ ' ''rl.. l1\)o{ 1 " � l'\ht'r \\;111 III(- IU'W PH" ;' 1 .11-111 will Ill' .11\ all . ){ITI (:d"lll" �1�11l'l("r'"

:,rt" .\rdy� Hr"tll ,,101. "'1'1101l10T,' .. n' r!'·

I !ar�·. ( ; ,-rallll l ll' ( ) 1<011. j\1I;'Or, TTI.'a .. IH,-r. ___

N_E_

W __ A_, _5_, _8_, _P_R_E_X_Y",,�:-__ \nita R" lh . �'\Pl1" lll" r(' IoU";ll(,S;; l11al' -

Busy Summer for Studes I :�.;�.�. / t �;::11�a

J:�:I':�"::·'

:'I':1: i.::a:�:I::P�:�::;� S\'crdary , ,f t b " I(,,;.rd 01 EdllC;!lh'lI "f Lla:-se� hl'gin "II .I II Ill' IJ alld Ihe iirst Ihe �LC .\ . will gl l't' Ih(' illl ,,\·ali,\Il. :tlld 1I'rlll ends J uly lJ. Scn'lld trT11l heg-ills Dr. Martin :\nd("rSOil lI" i l l pH'nOlum',' 1110" jul)" 16 and cnds .\ngusl I S

' H'nlal l q·. :Ind 1�\llh I' flll"�cr �(>I,h"'llorc �tll1l!lI('r (Ia�� rl'\,r"�"lltat i l l',

b .. nt"liict;oll. II Stude.nts who need l"1l1pIOYlllClH 10 ;,rOllnll till' 1-'1.(' ,'al11pn� ("lilt· la r)'�l' I �' :\ rdy .. wa� a fre�hl1lan May Day at ,

"'ow a fl'w of O\lr �In(k� their ··\'aratlOlI."

But

w i l l !'pelld (t"ndallt this yt'ar: Gerry Waf. pre!>idenl of Campus Devn tiOlU for � Ic.mc.."ler and has hl'CIl a I11l'l\1ht"r of the Choir for two rt"ars: .\niIJ Hoth i� on the �rooring

During the aftt"rnOOI1 's ie!;t i\'i til" � Dr. lidp iinance their education should ap­K : lIheril1t" Lehntann. prl"siu('n t of I hl" ply I" til t> Collet:l"t" F:111 pk')"111cn 1 Sen'ic.::. \\'(lm�n '� �lissi ..... nar)" F('deralit'" �.i the 1 '\ 1 pn'st"nt oppor tunities for jobs

:\mt'Tlran 1 . 1l1h('r;'l11 ("hllrrl1 . wdl vn' .. ,'nt . 1I1"'H' rt)1l�, a J.!ifl of $30.1100 10 th" "oll q{I' Ir,"ll t lit· 1 ������������-"'

, ;'.�::li;;��7�'(.,;:h�f ���

rt�:��:i ' �i\'T:,I�lt,!:� I

of Ihe collt"ge. will mak(" the forl11:11 ;1'" (t"ptanee of this gift.

Corr>ing events

Produnion \\' 111 agaill hi' �peeu,'tI 11fi :\Iast cdlloTial �taff: J�-'an i� treasurer of wl h'u a J(lJodly IlUlllbtr of our Kirls the :\ SIt. Junior �hy Day a llt'udallt, and pnllrh tinll' clt)ck� at I'ariou� dt'fell�e I'rt:�ilknt Llf LS.\ : Huth Jl'llsl'n i s prcsi­

plall h for lin' SlILl1mer 11I0mhs, CII.K k dl'lll of tht" Choir and of Iht· Ice Skating

F R I I ) \ Y. �I . \ Y 17 _ '\ I I·<.ch'h.1 pundwrs indudt I. Y 1 1 1 :\ LEl'TZ. r lu h f' ,T sn'ollHl se111estt"T. and a 1I1l'lll-l" c' I ' l f <1 1 Spalla\l a� aft,'r fl a�H'� H A I < B A I� A � E\V T { ) � . �I .·\ X [ � E E K - her of tht" Girls' Sextctle; Huth rflm'get

1 R E �'I . �I I R l :\ � 1 H U P I'. A :\ I T.\ i� au aCI1\'e mcmher of \VA:\. Positions Accepted I Tl�r��?'�����;�,��;?'�r t�'>;�·

,��:.O.\ \

" . 1� ( IT I l , I � G:\ J O H � S O � ami P,\ T K I -

B St d t T h C I\ I I r l l , T H t; S E :< , Mooring .lI1ast Editors '�Iis r�lr ��re '\'�I

a� I���.o:n ��:�'! :·:r�: i,,�1 a� \ 12:�{�aH':�I�.a l�I��,I::

10'",,<1 C"IlS("Hati,)n, lOll. Wi l l he louk - Chosen for Next Year rlt"llts graduatin", for Iht" Department oi it�. Lutheran Clmr,h.

i ll).: li p. rO\11e I !It· SI1Il1l1I,'r 1,,()llths. 1 ' :\ '1' !\t')(t year Ihc �Ioorlng Mast will I-:.Iucatioll. nim' !>t'niors ilnd four j unior:- I . . . j ' l ' f( \' I S wil l ht' canning c \ erylhillg aKain be edHed h) A ni t., StUt'1I ;1111.1 :\Iicc

\\lth IhTet'-)la r ctrt,r'rale� \ ft�r <.t'\ c r. / t 0l1l1l11'ncelllt'III t':-;erCISt'!, al J .JI, fro 111 ).:, .. ,,,�hur,e� to StT11l ){ b(' llls \\ In le R rudie. who han' ht"ell I"o-('(I itor<; durillg a l lIlQnth� of qndJ'nt teacll111,1{ 111 10c:..1 P III Trimly Lutheran Chllrch I � ( ) I{ F � E 5 1' 1 1 . 1 1 K E O a11(\ ( ; I{ :\ C £ this past year. Bllt the new set-lip w ill

"chools "le\�l1 01 Iht' thlTt,'tli 111l1sht"d ( Continued on Page Three) tw a one-head-at-a·ti111e arrangeillt'llt. products h.n � reached a dt'chh'n ,I� 10 �t'xt fall. Anita will take over as ed-

� here tilt'} \1 111 launc h tht'IT (alccrs III:)(t 111emories From Freshman Year Fill Many Boxes; iIOT-;l1·chi.-£ fur the first semester and

fal�i arion Butln w;\I tt"al'h Ihl" 71 h and Presents Puzzling Problem for Transportation :

e�;s;:�I.1 take charge during the second

.·\ llce Kaaland Ihe Jrd and 4th �rades <!t By DAPHNE HELLMAN o\'er jagged ice-knt"eling � I wouldn't Grace Elaine Gulhaughen will � 811s-

th(" FOSler school in Sl"aule. Annie Lien Pack UI' your trappings in your bulgy ha\"t" missed it for the world, though. iness Manager for the ne.xt M. M, year. nl1d !tiara Kjesbu ",ill t each i n the pri· old trunk and hit thc road for homc, Chri�tl1las banquct menu. Oh horrors!

mary grades in Puyallup : H.ichard Bates Already: I t kind:! looks that way. A Thilt was the time ' when that new fcllow �l:irjoril" Edgl"hi l l. and Lorene \Vilsoll year gOIlt", but where did all this truck was my "first neighbor to the right,"

have accepted vositions ill TacOlua, come from? Boy! \Vhal a college kid \Vas I ev("r in a dither� 1 ate his salad. Caroline Hawlc\' will instruct the 4�h' t"all't accumulate iii aile year. Nothing I Disco\"ert'd he apparently didn't miss it ).:rade at Wood�n\"llle. Lillian Thorleif- short of i/o box l'ar could possibly get aU so ate mine, too.) He retaliated by

son the 4th grade at I ssaquah, and Ar- thi,. home, One solution� Thruw out half! " stepping" a beautiful hole through, Illy dis SeverSOIl will be in Bel fair. Two of Of the sah'aged half. discard half of formal skirt. And we've bee� friends

Ihe gradll:tt('.� like Parkland so well that that. Ahhh! Now you're " S(! ut'czed down ev('r since. Gracious� Hl"Tl" � that' homt"iy

Ihey will return 10 tr.c cOll1munity as to size." and evcrything fits perfectly- lillie plaster monkey r won throwing

instructors next year. M ildred Martin l" " erylhi llJ( Ileatly packed. ready to da�h baseball� at the Saga Carni\·al. I'd never

will teach the 71h and Betty Christensen home \\'ith you whell those last goodhyes find room to take it home-buuhe's all

a primary grade ill the local lichool. aTe said. I savcd fr011l the carnival. \Vhat e\'cr

NEW FACILITIES PLANNED FOR PLC

!\"ow for just one last 100k through possessed lilt' to kcep this old. gnarled that pile of discards before parting for stick ? Say! That was Illy trusty staff on

k��ps, H er�'s that stack of programs. our hayride. Sounds funny, do�sn't it ?

ball4uet menus-just everything. Look at \Vell, see. the hayride kinda fizzled alit.

The remodeling of the heating system this baltered littlt" IUllcheon napkin, That is, WI! didn't ride , . . No horse . . . at O ld Main is nearing completion, Thi Hey ! That's from Ihe iaculty rcception. no hay . , , so \\'e hiked . , and what a

contract was awarded to Bergh Griggs, Jeeps! Remember that? Speaking of be.- day!

and work has been in progress for two iug scar�d silly-that was thc ni"ht. No I t kinda looks likc this is thc stack I

months, As well as adding to thc gen- wonder it's battered. Got twisted to wan led to san� after all. How will I get

eral comfort of all concerned. the heat- d�ath. Here', an old ticket stub--from il home? Sure I 'd carry it, ann load b�'

iug system wil l save fuel. the ice-skating party. These scars on my arm load, e" ery mile of the way. Shuc ks ! Fire doors for all six landings in Old knt"es? Three guesses wh�re I got them. This isn't juuk. This is my first year at

(ConUnued on Page Four) I slid the entire length of the arena, PLC!

---------.� --- ,<�,,�----------

Saga Coming Soon The Sagas are coming. Ira la

tra lal No wonder the kidA wel-come them in .uch a spirie. Look what the.y are-.memories of an en· tire year. Morocco bound I Take a gander at Wt claa. picture, Good looking kid •• aren't they ? (Itll be more fun to laulh at those "cute" hair <Io.-boy. induded-�en years hence.) Its funny bow, apparently, the book i. practically worthless until it is "atoned from cover to cover with blotty .iCnaturet and Witty reminders from all the fel­low jerb, Why tbey alway. siln acro" their faces is hard to under, stand (unleu you aaw that face " unsigned".) Blotty and besmirch­ed-a pri.ze pouea.ion. Saca sign­ing , , . the grand finale to a arand year,

\

- "

PAGE TWO PACIFIC LUTBERA..� COLLEGE Mal' 17, 1945

THE BOOal.w.G BAST W:��HTEH:E���:S Publl.ebed enry two weeki during the .chool :rear by

spirit of tht 'tud�nt body and facult,.:' Addrus: EM. P.' E. PfluC!.cr. USNR, USS Lei (L) 702. (,'0 Fleet Post Office. San Franci sq? California.

aludenu of Pacific Lutheran Collele. Orrlee: Room 130 Telephone: ORanite 8611

Subscription prlee-:..Sl.00 per V-ur- - --Entered u second elua matter. OCtoHr 2, UJ6, at lb. POI'

Ofl'lee at p.rlllu�a:�I.Dfs07Di. under the Act of

KDI'IURlAL (fJ'AJI'F CJO.BDITOM _____________________________ A....''ilTA 8TUlCN, ALlOR BROOIB �late Edltor ________________________________________ Theodore Relta SpartA Reporter _________________________________________ Watt Kunachak Reporters: Daphne Hellnl3n. Ardys Bred\'old, Telma Metzger, Anita Roth, truth

Johnson. Louise Tollfeldt. AdTteer ______________________________________________ Mn. Ruth Franek

BU81NE88 STAFF

BU� HAlfAGBII.-_____________________________ ..J)()ROTBY NIIilIIAN 5§�f.f��:t{{{�[[H[[[H[[[H[HH[[H[[[[[[H[t�g:i���� E:Iehan,e _____________________________________________ Graee Birk.atol Solicitor;: Margie Carl.on, Grace Gulhaugen, Rnmohr Gulhaugt:n, Jocelyn Lynne,

Ruth Bjerkan. and Sylvia Blomelie. �

AdTtMr _____________________________________________ ------0. 'J. Sluen

Look to the Future VE Day is gone but not forgotten. Here on the campus we went

about our usual activities and commemorated the event with quie[ mediu­tion during our morning chapel service.

In our rejoicing over victory. lee us keep in mind our own PLC boys who paid the supreme sacrifice : Roy McKinley. Hugo Swanson. Gerhard Lane, Craig Johnson. Roger Lunde. Alvin Bodvig. George Galbraith, Frank Unger. Lawrence Ganes, Harold Johnson and Warren Hokenstad. They gave tm-ir lives that we all might live in a decent world. and our duty to them is ever to keep the ideal for which they died in working order.

But the war is nor yet over. and the period has not yet been placed after our casualty lists. The unfinished struggle against Japan will call for greater effort. greater sacrifice. than a,ny we have yet made. But a sec· and, and final V Day will come.

We pray (hat tbat day is not [00 far in the future. We look for· ward to the time when our campus will present a more balanced student body. a rime when we can attend college free from the dread shadow and awful responsibility of war.

Vacation - Welcome Word! Vacation ! How that word sings in our ears. The very word vaca­

tion brings to mind a change-a change of scenery. sight and sound, a change of place and a change of people. Time was when vacation meant going barefooted . going swimming. playing "house" all day. picking ber­ries. playing marbles or making sling shots. But all that is gone now. Vacation means work to most of us. Vacatipn means going back to old jobs. finding new ones. mC€ting new people. facing new problems. or pleasing old bosses.

Vacation is no longer a three month recess. bur a three month quiz. resting whether that knowledge We have acquired this past term. that poise we have gainc-d these last nine months. thar reliance we have gathered the past year will function when we're on the spot and need it !

Home Is Where the Heart Is

Yes. there is some ink on the W".lll over there. where I shook my pen the other day. I didn't mean to do it. but don't you suppose i[ could be calcimined over ) The plaster is cracked a little, [00, but I don't know, there's something individual and unstandardiud about those cracks.

E.n.ian Thoma. H. Hoakim. ex '43. -\:JSN·�"" �i6-w.inp-.a.L.J..Qe.. Lt. Vestal B. HUCh .... ex '.fJ ;5 now .

hL�_ &l.- SCdi.l.i!....J!i!!o_uri. He &ir bast: at Corpus -Chri.ti. Texas. on visited frienc:!. on the campus last month April 25. Among' those witnessing the ,while on fur'oul'h. Addrus: Lt. Vestal ceremony wen his pafcnts. Mr. and Mrs. B. Huahu. Sedalia, AAB. �dalia, Mo. H . Hoskins of Steib.coom Lake. Ens. Also here last month was Ens. C. R.

Hoskins, who e'lIer�d th� servic«: July Loete. ex '43, who came from Bainbudgc, 4, 194J. has been usigned to the naval Maryland. H� is training recruits and air field at Deland. "'a.. for further has bi:ell transferr�d. Ens. C. R. Loete. training. "Tailspin Tommy." as he was nicknamed when he attended PLC. was active in football. basketbaJ1. and track.

USNR. Naval Training Center. Miami. ria. Major Haule. PLC's dean 011 tea\'l·.

"I ju.'!t received a copy of the M. M. made a surprise visit home from South and t can't beRin to express the thril l I Carolina recently and was able to wit· got out of r�ading' abou·t mar,y friends ne.'!s the annual May Day celebrations. and classmates that t hadn't heard about New .ddre!ls: Major Phillip E. Haule, in years." writes Lt . . Ken AMMOn. 'J7. from sO '

-llewhere in China. "The M . M . 0·9·Z62. Hp. & Base Service Sq .. 5 14th

brings back many wonderful memori�s of the days when I h-allnted the halls and faculty at PLC.·' Address : Lt. K. D. An· enson 01644085. CCc. Q9Jrd Sig. Servo

ir S�rvic� Gp., A PO 18755, San Fran·

Co., APO 627. c·o r. M .. N. Y. Eld. A. F. Hcany. '38. is now a boat

officer. recreation and welfare tPfficer, and stands communication watches on his ship. the K.'\.-9 ;\ Ihen;]. a carRO at· tack vessel in a tran!lpon squadron. Ad· dress: Ens. :\. F. Hean),. USS .'\Ih�na.

cisco. Calif.

PARKLAND'S PRINTING HOUSE A modern plant in a thriving community to give Parkland business and individuals every

printing need.

BEARD

PRINTING CO. Buement of P. L. C, ChaPel

Paul E. Pflueler, �:o:: '43, also expresses his apllrciation for the M . M . in a leiter to the staff. He writ("s: "'\Vhenever I get a copy. it is lik(" spending a thirty-min­lite liberty back on the good old PLC campus again. It is also nice to read the hits about my huddies and to learn where they are. I would like to hav� you thank the fandty for me--for the Christmas greeting they .'lent. I am anxious to re­turn and to gel back to .'Ichool and finish my last year at PLC. I imagine I will find quite a few changes when I ret urn : ':������������� Ilew faces. lIew huildin�. new courses- r but there is one thing I krrow that will be the same. and that is the fri�nJly

Whether your name

is

Mary, Jane or Billy

You'll find your

Sportswear

at

bundquist-billy!

THE NEWEST, LATEST

RECORDS and SHEET MUSIC

TED .IOWN MUSIC 1121-23 Broad ... ...,.

.EI .. LAND H,uDWAIE CO. U6&8 PACIFIC

OR. 8780

I sort of enjoy lying in bed studying them, seeing how tbey meet and cross I,�::::::::::::� I I each other . . Do you know that i n one place a lot o f them meet and form a crooked tittle bouse? It eVen has windows in it. Do you· think the ceil· Lundberg Drug ing's too high? Wen, anyway it keeps us looking up.

I sure hope the woodwork wears as well in the next fifty years as it has in the last. It is fifty years, isn't it? There are a few places here and there where it's a bit rough and worn, but what's a ,;:plinter or rwo be· tween friends? The closets? No. thue isn't very much space, but you know we have one advantage-a lot of room under our beds. We can always store a lot of stuff under them that we don't use. Nobody knows the difference. Yes, it was a little dis.heartening when we came last fall and saw it, but do you know.-I think I'll stay in an old room next ye/r, too.

A nd So Farewell Another year of college is almost history-a)) over but the shouting

and test week. When We look back, days and weeks all merge into one, and it seerii� impossible that work, sweat, and play ar� over for another year.

Under the gavel of Prexy Mykland, first woman smdent body presi· dent on our campus, we have seen an active year. In fact, the complaint has been "There's too much going on" rather than the negative. Congratu. lations go [0 Miss Mykland and Q[her ASB officers for two �mesters of excellent leadership.

And so we come to the crossroads foc another summer. Grads pass over the line into the "world" and we continue down college lane. We will miss ' elvm and all the othen who will be gone when we report back next fall; until then, " God be with you 'til we meet again !"

ENJOYED BEING

WITH YOU

Congratulations ( i _� to the

Graduates

H IJ G

11810 PACIFic AVE.

PHONE GR. 8619

Wba:t. :roa. waat olnce � Co Flm. CHIISTINSEN

STATIOMBR (ROIenburp) 913 Paclftc Ave. DR. 4629

STOP AT

� EjlI] 1� for Dellcloa H ....... n .... .,...

J .... .......... _ me. 0' ... .... PocHlc

(.

I '

·., .

T A G D Rl A Tacoma today is .l fast e x panding (cnter of

Industry

Transportation

Construction

Medicine

Learnin!(

I n tnese fields it will open many doors of opper·

[unity now and tomorrow.

To each of these fields d{'((ric light and power are

basic clements

In Tacoma today and in the Tacoma of wmorrow

the best opponun it ies will open (0 {hose who have

dire<:tfd their schooling [0 m.ilSlery of some skill .

some branch of science essential (0 this new eu.

Make rhe most 01 your educational

opportunitif'S tod.ey so that l/(XI may

berrer servt your community. nation

and the UJ0rld romarrou!.

Girls' Sports Clothes MAKE GOOD SCHOOL 5A1lMINTS

See ,.... .. Washington Sports Shop

9 1 8 PACIFIC AVENUE

Johnson & Anderson GR�UIIS - flOUR - HAY GUIN - ITC.

On the Mountllin Highwo!lIY Q P.rIJ.nd. w .....

ANDERSON LOMBER COMPANY 9802 PACIFIC AVENUE

GR.nite 73 1 I

Busy Summer i COlll;T1\1�d frolll pagf' ont)

allli I H ' �I O I I R (;LTIIAl'(�E� plan ,.' :;tn:k flriCII)' to fish.

\" I K G I X I:\ ISnCK will gi\'t' Ih(' \\ia!<hin)l:lnn (n-Ol>. a ludo' hrrak wh('11 �ht' It'l1t1s .. hand 10 th�

'candling and

",,,wd o:r I llK of t' IH(�.

R l' T I I J E N S E r\ will h� a playground l("adN al \\"rl)(hl Park r" H on��I:' :lh�

�a. ...... , " I t's nnl an 01111("1 for Illy ��col1(l ,"llil dhoo<I,'

I t s th� hl'rrit'lo wilh ;\ 1\ �A :\ r\ D Et{· SE�-lolla\\ ht'rr�' picking. 10 be specific.

"

PA.GE TRUE Saf�way Slor� in L�wi �IOII. Idaho. (Cla!­�iried ad.) .r\GNES ROLEDER will do ��nf'ral "fiice work for h�r falnu In L .. di. California.

nOROTH SA · OFSTK[)A,l-" if, r_1.lJ �oing a long way from hom�. II�T work

..... i l l la'ke h�r 10 :\Iinnupohs whe.re shc will t� employed i n Ih� offic� of Ihe Board of Education of the N. L. C. A.

E V A N G E L I N E A H R ENDT will �p("ncl Ihr�e monlh!! in Ihe d.lrk roolll-1101 solitary confiTl�lIIelll, hal phOlog­

Tal·hy

D A P H X E H E LLM .. \N \\"111 work off a lilll� �:'IIic�ss �n�qcy in her former po· lIilion as a complom�t�r op�rator )or Ih� Pacific Ted. & Td.

I f yOIl Ilt"ed :lIIy financing to lide )'OU

OVt'T lill IH'"I{I POl)' da)" yOli might k ... ep III mind I1ETTY LOU 'R I EK E, who

A FTON H J EI.. �I will be \\'llh the plans to work i n Iht' Cashmer� bank, or Army Engint!�rs. Sound., good!

�.�:s��n \����I;I�� t����. win be al Ihe ETTA CLAUSSEN. Quote: ' " I ' m

I(oin' home t o I h t' farm ( Sandpoint. I da­ho) and play with all th ... n�w littl� baby a'limals." Isn't that louching:

1 . 0 1 5 PE N � I N r will flow�r rout for r,=========='!""='lI tht Ghilarducci's California Florist. Old �'O\1 know W� had a ranK�r' in ollr

nlld�I' /( R I. E X F. Cl ) H () E � wi l l be in Forl'�1 .s�r\'lc� for Iht :"ummer.

;\ nd Dad is (,OIl1illlol: in for his shar ... of a liltl� hdp Ihi� SUlIl1ner. B ETTY K E N · \VORTH Y win c l e r k at h�r fath�r's

Peerless Grill Noted ror tbeb- lCmdenc,

PJoontpt 8errloe, aad FIne JI"oo.1 915 Commerce ... .A. 9702

RAYMOND ELECTRIC CO. 8 1 3 PACIFIC AVENUE

BRdwy 1 7 1 2

C O H R I r\ E F. R 1 C K S O � i .. rush'inj( I ill' �eason and wiH lake- hrr plac(' on :he olher �idt' of Ih ... dtsk 10 leach parochial �l'h" ol at EllIunc!aw, \Va�h

F.lllrrinK Iht nurs·inK proft'ssion are �I A R Y E\' E I<S( ) X and I � G I{ I D � :\ HT I ?\ S n :"\ The)" will Ilun Ih ... uni·

forms of Cadel r\ur .. ("s alld tn ler Irain­in!o( al Iml1lanu�1 HO;;I,iI31 in Portland. M .-\RGARET E L L I S will be employ�d :::=:::::::=::::::�: I " I' �fadiga'l Hospit.11. M ;\ R I E FUNK will h",("ol1le a nurst'� aid.

SUHlHler school h('ckons to Il lIil(' it llumht'r of our mort' amhilious coed!!, or

qUALITY KNITYING CO. 934 COMMERCE

.. I lea st Ihose who appar�nlly can't part with Ihtir hooks for the summer. And Ih(,"11 Ih ... r e ar� a few plnlocran who are going 10 Ir:\\"..-I this SlUum ... r. :\1 Y RTLE

�������������� I D A \' I DSON will KO hack 10 �Iinnesota.

r EILEEN M A R K E N is planning it cruis ... to :\Iaska. 1 .015 DR:\GOO and �f:\RY CA I N ar ... going Spanish on us : l.IId will spend some lim� in Tiajuana, M ... xico. (This isn't sour �rap ... s, of course, hili those Irips h'lIl better be necessar),! 1

Victor's Market OOLD STORAGE I.A1aDIIR8 • GROCERIIII8 MEATS .

BROOKDALE GR. 8638

1 1 1�;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;� 1 � c. O. Lynn Co. BROADWAY MOTOR CO.

MOR1UARY 711 TAOOMA AVE. ........ HAlD ..011

SpecI.I..... Allfo a.,.lrI..,

Sta .... "'_ PrlC" TRICKS · JOUS • MAGIC QuatomeI, - Tuxedo. - 8erpeIItIDee

714 Bro&d wa7 BR. 38U Neal E. Thorsen 916 � Broadway

Congratulations to the Graduates

ANQERS FLORISTS

SEARS, .OEBUCK AND� CO.

...... Ih.oY .. 13 ..

ALL THE GOODNESS. THE NAME IMPLIES

HOMOGENIZED

MAiD f861

MEDOSWEET K�I:�I"'I ..... I LK

PAGE FOUR

.\ 1110111'0: th(' �pnllo.: �Ilort� l'lllhuslast�

thi,:;. �l'a�" 11 "l' filld our own huuse-

l11Uthl'f. �I rs. I I \JI �laJ . . \ccording to sev­l'ral (·xcil ... 1 rlTllrb. �hl' \\"a� �"l'lI "bik­

llljo/;" duwll th .. a\t'!lu,,-I, ith the COUll-

",'hl1lo( ,,' Al Kuhn-a fn"

�pnl\J'i: dan' ajo! .. ,

Campus CIl'an-l'p Da� \\"a� al;;o

clean';lp da� for iiI'" fl'llls whel1 till"

I"><.,�·,. thr.·" tlH'!l\ illtu the neek that windy afl.'rn\'011 - Betty Kenworthy,

Mary Everson, Ingrid Martinson, Rum

Gulhaugen, 3 u ri Margaret Ellis. \\' i t b an <'� ... <II' t i lt' rati.'ll bO(Ik. the h . . ,,·s : 11 -tfl\\ e d thl' ).!"irl� hI n' 11 10l t' I h l' l f

'�I\tle�

befoft' .o.:eltillJo.: dllnk.'d

Max "Red" Vetters has "t'<'u I<'anll,,( an'llnd 11"-.' a h"lhl" a-iirl' ever _1 1 1 <'" 11 ..

jo!" t IlI ix.'d \11' \I i l tl :1 11It l,' hClina rill�"

May Day Memo";es YUI" It l""kt'd 1 1k,' uld ::;',,1 " a.� d"uhle­

,·nl,,,III).!" tI� ,111 IIH' 111<'lllorahle ,Ial<" " I .\ b �· 4 I l e 'd 1><'('11 �hini l lg for da�'" h"

PAOIP'IC LUTHERAN COLLEGE

I PLC to be Headquarters For Leadership School

PL( will ;u,ain he the sC{"lle of thc

IIl,lpllll hn tho,..., �Iilil-silhu\lt'ue diet. l .eadrr�h ip TrailiHlg School nf the

arc tho�e "6:flll o'clock in the m"rml1S" Korthwcst District of thc :\LC, JUIlC \9-

te-I1Il1S �;\I1H" of Jo LOV'Yold and Carol 24. Or�al1izl'd for the lluq)Ose of Vre:par­

Elefson. They'n' I"b L.f 11111, loo---if Y()II il1lo{ }"lHlIIg pcople: for better service in

d,'I'l 't ml�� \"Olur �1l'l'I" church work, the school was first hchl last year on our campus, August 16-21.

:'\ t th�' (,l1d "f til\" S.'1ll"._tn wh"'1 Each t'ollgn'gatiou in the district will

�p"l1din).!" 1HOlll'�' is �I :111 all tl llle luw, send t w o or thrre ;;tude:nt-dcle:g·a les b{", l\"t' r:II1't help \\"lIderill� \lh:lt l'rn111 ptl'll tween Ihl' a�es 'of 16 and n. Erling Norde:ng In sl)('IHI $ I .�O lIn ash The �('\". T. M. r.rbhardt of Baker, Ira)';; at Ihl' corner-I(lt carnl\"al OreJ{oll. will art a� d ire\'tor of the

�Iar 1 7 , lQ4.i I .... ry and hold se!!siollS ill coB eRr da,..;:;-

About niH." hundred studrnu 3Itt'l1d('d Iht' Trail1l11R School III '44.

Nellie: I-!I�a, C-oI1t'!C(' of Edll('alioll I1l(lr, h<ls hct'l1 dt'c\n\ l n R l'rl'-ldcllt for 1945-4(,

BLUE RUSTIC OPEN FROM

A. M. 'Iii 10 P. M.

l ief(' are tw('ln' I"ords \" '\1 should he ahlt- to ,'-.;plaill : ,'pIglottis, :.;ylopholle,

arthropoda, \il,tterllich, i!lterl1i1liol1alism neilu\tHI ;;;, :\ri"Wlle, t ung-�tt'n, idiom, 01."­

tagoll, :\a l" a)O' . . �c!l1,.11\atic. \\' h y ;;hnuld

1 " \1 : \\·dl. hri!,:ht er('�' jllS! takc a look at tlH' Ilrst letter in each word. \\' hal .[ocs Ihat �pel1' That'� riloChl� Sec Y"1l \lcxt wn'k' Hr;\1� al.lll)o< a �harp pencil. IUB of I,apcf , Jl1<1 a guod l'rascr, \" ou'l 1 I]('n[ i t l "

FaCUlty f"f I h i � }"\'ilf il1fh1<\t-s l )r . .I. I ' I�;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:� Pf1\lq';�'T of tilt' cnlkloC�', !h'v. A. Holm " f :\l'\\' Bralll\f('I�, Tt'-.;a�, and J..: .,\' T .\. Krueger of H erinl1:toll, Kansas.

New Facilities I COllti nut'tI from pagl; onc)

Main arc reported �o h <l. '·e bn'n �hipped from Ibc fal"\nr;('� al1d will he instatled

Mrs. E. �l. Ka�tl'n (If Aurora will act as Deall of \\"omen and Rl'\'. E. ·W<lJ.! IH.T of Rearden wil l serve as De;J.11 uf Men for thc training school

Studt'nts wil1 be Iwuscd il1 the d"rl11;-

You'll make

the "grade" with

JOHNSON'S Service Station

Rt, 3, BOlli: 839 TACOMA, WASH.

OAKES APP�EL

9 2 1 Broadway Tacoma

f"rt'-<l llo l thl'll-J Il �1 ht"l';1US�' thl; PL( Cannpit,� will he 1'\;]( ... <1 (wcr both th�' � l a.1 1-",'1<' 1I;.d h.'(·ll ,,']lnlllkd f,'r thai IHlrth alld "'l1lh "lltral1ce� to 01,1 \lall1

L�,L� Mrs. Frisbies Bakery < 1:1.1'--1\" " ' a i "

h,'wi,. < I I I11I1�h that 1I111f!1\lIg--aft.'f � "

;;; :lttl�.lt. I \ �:;: :;;!r��.','�� r �Il ���11 1 Irl:':\;�<�1 �� 1�I:t,

Theil th r')I1),:h th., II 1 1 1,1,1\\' -tflk a _Ill ,� k in'hk ,hait " i lighl. It t'lOk "Illy a I t'll mllll\t"� f,'r " Id �,I t" l'r<1I'1; thaI bt' lIa'allt hlt�illt·��. <l.lId "" ht' wa� w<lf11l1y \\"l'icollll',1 wllh a f\llIlId l. f <lPpbU;;l'

Thus h('gJ.1I the i,,�ti \"t, spirit that I'rl'-1 :11 1\'11 thr" ughout thl; dJ.Y.

and " '\h-Ib" artl;;c iru11l tIlt' crowd a s the coloriul court I" ok it� plac(', It,d h�' "lIr gra" j<lus VII('t'T\ �l il ­(l rt'd I . :\lll._; e __ t h e :\[aypoll' dance­flower,.-all spt'llt-d heaut� :'\11d I ' I . C

t h i � SIIIlI111ef. Painting: of the two new

stair" ay,. II ill heg;n s(lon. ;\ pplicat;un iflr t i l l' (" ,lInpkl;OIl I If Old �Iain ( p re­l' iOll;;I�' dl'!1lt'd h .1 the \\'1'1\) h"s h\'�n made. Tlli� apl'llratiol1 rlc:ds w i t h fi:'; lng

SPORTSWEAR Rust Building Tacoma

(i'OR FINE BAKERY PRODUars 710 So. 38th St. Phone GA. 7591

np the fiftt! and �i)(lh fl00rs with new FRANWELL'S MEN'S CLOTHINCi fO')]ll� alld b\"atnry i<lt"iliti("�. \\'ork will OR FurBllhlagl, Hmo Sitoes \)(,,).:111 "IH' 11 all,1 ; f \\" I ' B priOrities arc INE J I d & P l ' granted. Work "11 the �cience hal1 and OUNTAIN 722 et an a. agrutl Iht I1CW C:Ylllf1;lsillm w1l\ �" forward a;;

. EATURES Brdwy 928 PacJtlc Avenue

Sllon as gOI't'rn ll1 c nt Tt'Kulatil 'n� Pl'rmit'

II�============� 1 �;;;;:;;�T�&C�o�m�a�2�'�W;;;"�h�ln�gt;;on;;;;�

The PLC inflr111ar� h;l� hn'll lI1<><krn-;:It'd and equipped with <I. washroom and lav atory. ... NDERSON GROCERY

Parklllnd. Wash, OR, 8560 T h e (",Iitorial (kllaT\lllt'f11 tak,,� IH,nt· " I

t h ., r('�lIOI"'lhilil\' for th;� :-;h(\\,l't'r'� SI 't'-1>.-alltill1l -- ,'s\H'l";ally beautiful ,'la' I-Ilalll.' .I· , 'nr , ' l cr'H'al"lh h1\,..ill<'''�

PIPER FUNERAL HOME 5456 S, PUGET SOUND

GArland 5 4 3 6 SOHOOL 8UPPLIBB aDd

HOMB REMlCDIES

thl llllgh tb.· .. <",Jured ).!"\;,�s.'� I I i �taff ' �============� �Pf\I1g. :\11,1 11" .' " t'ft' pr{1ud-proud tn hc 117============"'71 r-a part of that family. Maybc that'� why Ihc A. \\". S. 111\"itl;d our 11Igh school ,L:l1t'Sh tu �t<ty for I<'a �n that the)' 1lli�ht leaTiI a linlt 11IOre ab"t1t thl' �chl)ol--gi\"l' tht'lI l a CILI!H',' 10 �<e if thl'Y wallt­ed hi htUIIIIC a part ni that family

11 was ('1"\'11111;:. ;111.1 ,,1\ the ('001 hreeze;; there waftt'd in fro111 110whert' a haunt­illJ; ,melody. Snlllt'OI1.' was playing- tile plano that had been kft uut Oil the bWI\ alter the f.:�t i\· ; t;t' s . . \nd with that lulla­

hy I'LL" \·a\\llt'd . colltt'll tcdly alld rol1 erl on'r--another \.j;IY day Kone but not

for).!"otten

S E L D E N ' S Flnt i. Floor Coverl ...

OCCASIONAL FURNITURE

LINOLEUM - RUGS

SHADES - BEDDING

DRAPERIES

Frank Ekberg & Co.

Insurance

Puget Sound Bank Building

MAin 3356

Office: ,R 41« Res, PR 1526

B'erti l E. Johnson LAWYER

505 Rust Bldg, Tacoma, Wash"

BOOKS FOR ANY OCCASION

Shannan Bookstore 934 Pacific Avenue

Open Evenings till 9:00 p" m.

COLLEGE HAIRCUTS IROOKD ... U LUM.n CO.

P ... R K L ... N D . ... R . E R c, R, MAR8B

Mountain H1ghwll1

BROOKDALE, WASH.

Have Your Portrait Made the Modern Way

MODERNE PORTRAIT STUDIO PHONE MAl. 5431

9TH .nd PACIFIC AVENUE

slIAn ... T

THE, ROLLER BOWL SOUTH TACOMA WAY

J1

TACOMA

Your Insurance

don double duty {or bUTHERRI BROTHERHOOD Build Your

Estate Now! Lepl R ... rve Life in.surance for Lulheran.s • Herman L. Ekern. Pre8ldent

" 'y o u ! P r o v i d e s a

monthly income (or your dependents in the event of your death; or if you live to retire­ment age, gives you a

monthly i n c o m e fOr life,

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Pacific L ..... ra. Coil ... Clifford 01I0Il, .......