6
· commencement Week Begins May 31; · Renne Will Confer Degrees I on 184 Seniors; McCain Will Speak This year Montana State col~and the awarding of honors to • will be the president's reception I lege will graduate its fifty-first ,vomen students in recognition of I to be held at the student union at class and the commencement week their outstanding accomplishments 8:45 p. m. activities centering on this event in college. Formal commencement exercises will begin Saturday afternoon 1 The Saturday program will for the conferring of degrees and May 1 31, with the traditional 'W_ o- close with 8 musicale at the stu-1 ~he a:,·arding o~ three-year nurs- man s Day program and culmin- dent union at 8:15 p. m. by music mg diplomas will be held --at the ate Monday morning, June 2, with department students. gymnasium at 10:30 Monday morn- the formal commencement exer- Sunday's events will begin at ing, June 2. President James A. cises ~t which Presi dent Jam~s A. G:lO p. m. in front of the gym l\!cCain_ of M~ntana State univer- 1\~cCai~ of Montana State umver- with the president 's concert played s1ty wlll deliver the comm~nce- ~1ty will be the speaker and Pre.s- by the college concert band under ment address, an~ degrees will be 1dent R. R. Renne of MSC will the direction of Lou Howard. Th e conferred and diplomas awarded confer the degrees. Chancellor baccalaureate service will be held by President Renne. The invoca- George A. Selke will deliver the in the gymnasium starting at 7:30 tion will be given by the Rev. baccalaureate sermon at the ser- p. m. with Chancellor Selke de- Charles H. S. Houk. vices Sunday evening, June 1. livering the sermon. His subject Music for the commencement A total of 184 seniors are can- will be "The Meaning of Faith ." exercises will include the proces· didates for bachelor of science de- The invocation and benediction will sional and recessional played by I grees, 11 graduate students are be given by the Rev. Walter C. the college orchestra; a flute solo, candidates for master of science Wiampler, and the prayer will be the Nightingale, by Donjon, play- ' degrees and there is one candi- given by the Rev. Harry M. Krie- ed by Carol Bolmeier accompanied date for a professional degree. bel. by the orchestra under the direc- In addition, there are 22 candi- The processional and recession- tion of l\lr. Sedivy; and two num- dates for three-year diplomas in al music at the baccalaureate ser- hers by the concert chorus, \V'e nursing. vice will be played by the college Have No Other Guide, by Svedof, Opening the Commencement orchestra under the direction of I and Advent llotet, by Screck, di- week prngram will be the Wo- Edmund P. Sedivy. Geraldine rected by JI.Ir. Sandvig. man's Day at which the principal Fitzgerald, pianist, will play Men- Immediately following the com- speaker will be Frances Pickolick delssohn's Concerto No. 1 in G. mencement exercises there will be Ray who was designated the 1947 Minor accompanied by the orches- a senior-faculty picnic at the iris 1 speaker when she was graduated tra, and the Men's Glee club di- garden. five yea rs ago. Woman's Day will rected by Conrad Sandvig will The degree candidates and begin at 1 :30 Saturday afternoon sing two numbers-TeDeum by three- year diploma students for with the colorful processional to Sibelius, and I Wonder As I Wan- 1947 and their prospective degrees the gymnasium, followed by the der . are as follows: Graduates of 1947 made th e~r:___first appearance in caps and gowns at the Honors day assembly last Wed nesday. Clausen Photo address of the five year speaker Concluding Sunday's program I (Continued on page four) MO NT AN A fP EXPO N ENT volume XXXVIII BOZE.Iii\\. \10\TA \A. \'i ' l:.IJ\ESDAY, ~- 1917 3tudents Given H ono rs; Defective Monta!}ans M. S. C. Faculty Phi U. E lects \ ,,,. . D S h Sho u ld Be Returned w·u O r Sisumoto Pres. .v 1erriam e 1vers peec I ta~:~:u~:\\~ ~::~;f d~~;ri~}t~:1:~~ 1 e Iver id!~c::u:;:;i~~:~~;, Students who were outstanding in scholarship and campus wrongly assembled, _students who A ddress es national Home Economics honor- Number 22 I Women's Day Plans Announced; All Women Must Attend Assembly Fnday At 1 1 a .m . eadcrship at the annual cholaslic Honors and Senior Day as- have recet\'ed defective books are ary, at a recent meeting. Other embly in the gymnasium were awarded honors May H. Prof. H. requested to return them to the )lontana State college faculty officers elected were Ruth Mae There will be a special Women's Day assembly Friday, l\1ay ;. ;,,lerriam, head of the English department at illontana State }lontanan office at once. members will soon begin a series Poetter, vice-president; Joyce 23. at 11 a. m .. w_hich all wo,~en studen_ls _are expected to attend. mhersil) deli\ered the principl address. and Dr. R. R. Renne, pres- This error was not discovered of high school commencement ad- Mansbridge, recording secretary; The purpose. of tins ~ssembly is to fam1hranze ,the women with the dent of the college, presided. 1 before because the sample book dresses in many Montana cities. Phyllis Todd corresponding secre- parts the) will play 111 the program on ~omens Day, Iay 31. The In announcing the indmdual sent in ads-ance of the fo·st ship-, Dr. Klemme will make lhe bac- tary· Betty Don McMillan treas- \'i 'omen's Da) chairman for next year will be announced, the AWS tudent honors, D1·. Renne named Final Exam Schedule ment was correctly assembled. _At calaureate address at Belgrade urer; Blanche Franklin, hi~torian; I officers installed, and th~ Big·L_i.ttle Sister Captains announced at anet Helen Stentz of Kalispell least one _,d,·asdreported as having ' High school on May 18 ar.d the Georgia Mooney librarian· Mar- this a,sembly. The follO\llng nollce has been posted: he winner of the Deane B. The faculty has approved m- pages ups1 own. jorie Roberts m 1 usician· l\farjorie ~ ) "Attendance at the Women' a f I O d f e. commencement address for the , , Day assembly at 11 a m Friday wing le scholarship in bacteriology ugura ion ° a new ma ex- ne e ect1\·e book has the fol Pott marshal · Jeanette Stevens · · ' lid botan ~. amination schedule, beginning 1 . \V , - nurse graduates of the Great Falls ed,·to'r· and To,dd Hagelund chap'. )lay 23, is absolutely compulsory. ~wmg error~ : o~en s coopera- Deaconess hos.pita! on June 14. , ' Charles N. Dougherty of Butte with the fall quarter of 1947- t1ve house picture 1s left out and lain. Roll call will be taken by the fol- ~ceived the Montana State Socie- 48 · Pi Phi appears twice (paaes 129- Speaking on "Brainpower, Our The same evening the following lowing girls: f of Engineers Gold Medal Under the new schedule, fi- 133); Phi Kappa Alpha pic'ture ap· 1 Only Hope for the Future" Dr. girls were initiated into Phi U. : Freshmen, Carol Kelly; sopho- ~ward in Engineering from C. lf. I nal examinations will be two pears as Sigma Chi (page 143). Lloj:d Be_rg, head of the Chem1.cal Dorothy Balch, Elaine Helene, mores, Betty Don MacMillan; jun- teele, president of the society. hours in length, one examina- Engrneermg department, w 1 11 Thelma Stenmark, Joyce l\fans- iors, Carol Seebart; seniors, Jan- Along with \Villiam "~ood of tion for each course, rather ~peak at Harrison, May 14; Turn- bridge, Betty Don McMillan, Mary ice Gaines. ozeman, Dougherty also recciv- than the present method of us- Tau Bet a Ph1 ' er, i\lay 28 and Harlem, !\fay w. Lou Pasha, Jeanette Stevens, Phy]- Nancy Austin will give a brief :l the Phi Kappa Phi award pre-I ing the last scheduled class Chosing "Youth in Demand" for lis Todd, Rachel Batch, and Georg- history of past \Vomen's Days, and :?nted annually to the outstanding hours for examination purpos· I , , ] 3 his topic, Dr. Harold F. Hollands ia Mooney. Girls are chosen for Eileen Reiquam, chairman, will ex- cudent. This year marked the I es. n1t1ates of the agricultural economics and Phi u. out of the upper two-fifths plain the day's activities. Nancy rst time the award was made i sociology departments, will be at o( their class, for their interest Stenson will give a report on the > two students. H. G. Halcro\\", , Preside nt Renne Tau Beta Pi, national engineer-, Lonepine, May 19; Belt, May 20, in Home Economics, their leader- A.W.S. conference in Minneapolis resident of the fraternity, said I . . ing honorary fraternity, initiated Highwood, May 21; Cascade, May ship and spirit of cooperation. which she and Pat Geary attended. 0 choice could be made between w 111 Go r O I thirteen new undergraduate mem- 22, and Dutton, May 23. Women's lJay ribbons will be 1e two recipients of the honor. b Titus Kurtichanov, assistant sold by the Spurs ,vednesday and To John Wright of Livingston England In August e,s and three g,adu_ate members professor of English, WIii speak Colle giat e Cha pter lhursday, May 28 and 29, in the ent the Phi Sigma biological. at mitiatwn ce,emomes )1ay 12 · on "Your Future and Your For- lobby of the SUH, from 9:00 to ater~ity award for outstanding Dr. R. R. Renne, president of As pledges, the undergraduate tune-They're What You Make l Elects Officer s EILEEN REIQUAM 5:00. The price will be $1.00, and or~ _in the field of science. Montana State college, has been members were required to wear I Them" at Custer, May 21 and Hy- chairman of " romen's Day. everyone, except Spurs and Sen· lmtiates of Phi Kappa Phi, sci 1 o- named a member of the Ameri- 1 large brass bents, emblems of Tau sham, May 22. On May 5, 19471 the Collegiate iors, are required 00 have them. stic ~onorary fraternity, are; can delegation lo attend the In- Beta P1, which they. had polished I R. H. Palmer, professor of ag- Chapter held their annual election Bobcat Band Takes Women's Day grew out of or- Patr1c1a Chapman, Ch a r I e 8 ternational Conference of Agticul- !ro~1 t_he rough .cas.tmgs. Also on ricultural education, will speak on of officers. The following mem- , ganizational advancement of wo- o~gherty, Jeanne Emery, Janice tural Economists, to be held at theu· hst of dutie~ was the large j hThe Next Frontier" at Hobson, T D T · men on the campus. As early as aines, John Heidt, Fred Krings, Dartington Hall, Totnes, South bent on the lawn in front of the I May 21 and Moore, May 22. bers were elected: President, Lew- WO- ay np 1914 there were women's assemb- rances MacGowan, Floyd Pah- Devon, England, the last week engineering building, as a High is Anderson; Vice Presidtmt, Or- \ lies when alumnae came and some sh, Charles Rohde, Don a Id of August and fir st week of Sep- School week project. ville Thompson; Secretary, Floyd The forty eight members of the marked honor was paid each of :.harff, Rudolph Schneider, Eu- tember. The American dekigat.ion Those receiving gold bents Mon- 1 Pl b T' k t Jenni· Trea s urer Ray Jenson· 'Re- Bobcat band, under the direction of the retur·dng Yisitors. These as- ene Wllde, William Wood, Ruth is limited to twenty re1aesenta- 1 day night were: Leslie Cowan, Ar- '1 ay oy IC e s porte;, Dean R;bertson; Sen~inel, Mr. Lou Howard, returned Friday semblies occorred toward the end 'oodruff, Raymond Erickson, tives. nold Draper, Harold Sitzman, Q s l N Wilson Burley. \ evening from their two-day trip, of the year. Then the Women's :ra_ri,on Sna_pp, R. F. Brebrick, A grant. from the Jt'ergu,jon Paul Hippely, Donald Fisk, Don- Il a e OW L t B. League committee worked on a lI R Th program of work for the stopping at ivmgs on, ig im - 1 1am e1quam, Rhoda Hover- Foundation to the U. S. A. CollHCi! aid Sauipson, Lawrence Lakey, ! e I b . B II Laurel and Colum- plan for ju&t one special Wo- ,n, Frances Oswald, Graeme Bak- of the American Farm Econon11cs. George Ruzicka, Bill Kelly, David Tickets are now on sale for past year was discussed by Past ei' 1 mgs, ' men's Assembly to be held near ·, Arthur Parsons and Robert association will assist delegat es in McCollough, Paul Poirier, Eugene I "The Playboy of the Western President Jim Schultz, and several I bus. the closing of the school year. -owe def · t I \\'"Id d B'II L II Th d ' \V Id" th t· k t b th · The band left the college on O l\I 26 1923 th f" W · raying rave expenses. 1 e, an 1 ~1~e . e gra - or at e 1c e oo m items were recommended for the j Th --d , M , 15 via the l\l.S.C. n ay , , e 1rst o- The following faculty members 1 L. K. Elmhirst of England is uate members m1t1ated were: E. 1 front of the SUB. Students only new officers to carry out ui.s aJ, aJd ' ·t f'. t men's Day was held with over 200 •re •!so named to Ph" K p "d f h \V S h" . D f E . . . . . . . special bus an gave 1 s ns con- h - 1 appa res, ent o t e International Con- . c 111mg, ean o ngmeermg, need present then· activity tickets After the meeting Dr p 1 er L" . t h" h h I girls participating in t e most im- ''li.: Dr. L. 0. Brockmarn, Dr. ference, and Dr. Asher Hobson, P f F d C H t' h d ht · d t Th d I ' · 8 m ' cert at the ivmgs on ig sc 00 t th 11 h d ro re . . omann, ~c in~ ea to. o. am ~eserve sea s. e a - chapter adviser, invited all the that morning. High school con- press1ve even e co ege • a 1Il S. Eckert, Dr. V. E. Iver~on, President of the American Farm of the Mechanical Engmeermg de- m1ss1on pnce for all, except stu- member s of the chapte t tt d . t B" T' b ever witnessed. The girls, wear- iss Martha L .Hawksworlh ~ind Econon11·cs assoc,·at,·on ,·s Cha·,,._ t d R' h I R Th d · h · · · · k r O a en certs were given a ig 1111 er · h"t k" t d b · ht! I par ment, an 1c arc . om- ~nts wit their activit! tic ets, a picnic at his ranch 1 Friday, May ii in out-door concerts mg w I e s tr s an ng Y co - • "illiam G .Walter. man of the United St;tes Council. as, 1923 graduate of M.S.C., now Will be $.75 for the first floor 116 th I and B_ 1 g ' th bl" t La __ ored sweaters, marched across the Phi Eta Sigma. freshman hon- with Westinghouse Electrical cor- and first balcony, and $.65 for the · were given for e pu ic a ui campus from Main Hall to the Ag- ary fraternity initiates ware: President R. R. Renne will ad- poration. second balcony. All seats will be el and Columbus. , . riculture building. At this point David Davidson, Merle Irvin e, dress the annual meeting of the For the first time in this chap- sold on first come-best seat basis. Officers Elected A t I The Bobcat ba~d \\ as organized the ceremony of Breaking the Ties tymond Kelley, Henry Lorentz, North Montana State Fair Board ter's history, a woman student has All seats are open to students and by Lou Howard 1dn 1 3 9 3 06 ~;\since was carried out. As the junior ,nnis Nelson, Earl Rangitsch , at its dinner at the Rainbow Ho- been elected to honorary member- the general public. 4-H Alumni Meet I that tune has! meda e r" t e our~ and senior line separated, the mis Smith, Roland G. Sof•, Ev- tel in Great Fa lls on Thursday h' R . . f th , Enjoyment plus, is assured the I They have P ay m O owns an girls crossed over and Dean Her- tt W 111 . M s ip. ec1p1ent o e woman s . . . '·I ntana includmg all e aage, artin Whalen , Jack evemng, ay 22. His subject is badge was Mi ss Frances McGow- audience as the Irish drama un- At the last regular meetmg of c1t1es 111 "o . F rick broke the streamers between !win Bailey, Lloyd Busma, James "The Development of Agriculture an senior architecture student. folds with laughter and Irish hu- the 4-H Alumni club held Wed- but four coundt,hes. . or m: n/ the marchers. From here the pro- ouch, Donald Baldridge, David Through Fairs". Th' d ted t h mor. Combining with the cast to nesday night ,·n the Agr"iculture years the ban as iourneye O cession continued to the gym. B e awar was presen o er 1 f th Washing- artley, Marvin T. Beatty. Also on the program for the at the banquet following the in- present this play, ll!ay 28 and 29, building, new officers were elected. Hel,enab' tot hdp ay e~erbrat~on at the In 1924, the processional started I James T. Brown, Vern W. dinner is the Montana State Col- itiation of the above members. will be the l ilting strains of the They are: President, Bill Saund- tons ,r ay c from Montana hall and proceeded own, Milton H. Campbell, Ralph lege Chorus of forty members ' Montana State College Symphon- ers; Vice-President, Betty Don Legislature. to the gym. The custom of choos- ·Sg,-i!f, Haydn Ferguson, Donald under the direction of Conrad J. ' ette, under the able direction of MacMillan; Secretary, Phy 11 is In 1939 the band played to over ing the Women's Day speaker of aff, Albert Heetderks, Jack Sandvig. The chorus will leave All girls pl anning to a ttend Mr. Edmund Sedivy. Todd; Treasurer, Rhua Slavens; 3 000 people on Montana day at five years in advance f r om the >ward, Albert Kraft, Robert Lin- Bozeman by char ter bus on school duri ng the Summer Ses- Reporter, Rosalie Mueller. The the San Francisco Exposition. At graduating class was also started t:~~i: ~~:::~, J;h: n~: 1 i Thi~s~:~u:~~;: Dr. Renne will ad- ~! o~ ::::: to': ~:'/ i"1:1 rru ~r;' ~!~ Li~::}~ 1::~;~n:~: m: ! ~;a: :~/~; :~~:;n~r;fg~~:s ~~r:~;,pr~:~:~ !~~;/~::c!~:: a:;:~da:~ % pi:; ~7rs! 9 ;!~ii!::~;"o/:~i~":w::; :~: 7. hlichtig, Howard Snow Rohcrt dress the annual meeting of the less special ar ra n gements are Monta na Stat,, Coll ege to a tea Snapp, Betty Don MacMillan, and Francisco, San Jose, and Portland. she came back to give her address ickier, Marvin Swens~n, Jlar- Montana Stock Growers associa- made in advance with the St u- honorin g Mrs. Lois Bu tler Payson Martha Wright. This year they travelled to San in l930. ,d Goudie, Robert Helm, Paul tion at Butte on "Plans for De- de nt We lfare of fice. These ar- on Thursda y afte rnoon, May 29, The club will hold a spring pie- Diego to support the football team In 1926 , Spurs took over and noen, Charles Masten, Thomas velopment of Livestock Researc h rangements should be made as "la:30-6:00 p. m. in th e Fireplace nic, May 25 at Spring Hill and at the New Year's day game in made all of the plans for Wo- (Continued on page th ree) and I nstr uction Work". scion as possible. room, Herri ck Hall. all members are invited to attend. the Harbor Bowl. (Continued on page two)

·Renne Will Confer Degrees Ion 184 Seniors; McCain Will Speak

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Page 1: ·Renne Will Confer Degrees Ion 184 Seniors; McCain Will Speak

·commencement Week Begins May 31; ·Renne Will Confer Degrees Ion 184 Seniors; McCain Will Speak

This year Montana State col~and the awarding of honors to • will be the president's reception

I lege will graduate its fifty-first ,vomen students in recognition of I to be held at the student union at class and the commencement week their outstanding accomplishments 8:45 p. m. activities centering on this event in college. Formal commencement exercises will begin Saturday afternoon 1 The Saturday program will for the conferring of degrees and May

1

31, with the traditional 'W_o- close with 8 musicale at the stu-1 ~he a:,·arding o~ three-year nurs­man s Day program and culmin- dent union at 8:15 p. m. by music mg diplomas will be held --at the ate Monday morning, June 2, with department students. gymnasium at 10:30 Monday morn­the formal commencement exer- Sunday's events will begin at ing, June 2. President James A. cises ~t which President Jam~s A. G:lO p. m. in front of the gym l\!cCain_ of M~ntana State univer-1\~cCai~ of Montana State umver- with the president's concert played s1ty wlll deliver the comm~nce­~1ty will be the speaker and Pre.s- by the college concert band under ment address, an~ degrees will be 1dent R. R. Renne of MSC will the direction of Lou Howard. The conferred and diplomas awarded confer the degrees. Chancellor baccalaureate service will be held by President Renne. The invoca­George A. Selke will deliver the in the gymnasium starting at 7:30 tion will be given by the Rev. baccalaureate sermon at the ser- p. m. with Chancellor Selke de- Charles H. S. Houk. vices Sunday evening, June 1. livering the sermon. His subject Music for the commencement

A total of 184 seniors are can- will be "The Meaning of Faith ." exercises will include the proces· didates for bachelor of science de- The invocation and benediction will sional and recessional played by

I grees, 11 graduate students are be given by the Rev. Walter C. the college orchestra; a flute solo, candidates for master of science Wiampler, and the prayer will be the Nightingale, by Donjon, play-

'

degrees and there is one candi- given by the Rev. Harry M. Krie- ed by Carol Bolmeier accompanied date for a professional degree. bel. by the orchestra under the direc­In addition, there are 22 candi- The processional and recession- tion of l\lr. Sedivy; and two num­dates for three-year diplomas in al music at the baccalaureate ser- hers by the concert chorus, \V'e nursing. vice will be played by the college Have No Other Guide, by Svedof,

Opening the Commencement orchestra under the direction of I and Advent llotet, by Screck, di­week prngram will be the Wo- Edmund P. Sedivy. Geraldine rected by JI.Ir. Sandvig. man's Day at which the principal Fitzgerald, pianist, will play Men- Immediately following the com­speaker will be Frances Pickolick delssohn's Concerto No. 1 in G. mencement exercises there will be Ray who was designated the 1947 Minor accompanied by the orches- a senior-faculty picnic at the iris

1 speaker when she was graduated tra, and the Men's Glee club di- garden. five years ago. Woman's Day will rected by Conrad Sandvig will The degree candidates and begin at 1 :30 Saturday afternoon sing two numbers-TeDeum by three- year diploma students for with the colorful processional to Sibelius, and I Wonder As I Wan- 1947 and their prospective degrees the gymnasium, followed by the der. are as follows:

Graduates of 1947 made the~r:___first appearance in caps and gowns at the Honors day assembly last Wednesday. Clausen Photo address of the five year speaker Concluding Sunday's program I (Continued on page four)

MONT AN A fP EXPON ENT volume XXXVIII BOZE.Iii\\. \10\TA \A. \'i ' l:.IJ\ESDAY, ~- 1917

3tudents Given Honors; Defective Monta!}ans M. S. C. Faculty Phi U. E lects \,,,. . D 1· S h Should Be Returned w·u O r Sisumoto Pres. .v 1erriam e 1vers peec I ta~:~:u~:\\~ ~::~;f d~~;ri~}t~:1:~~

1 e Iver id!~c::u:;:;i~~:~~;, e~~~c~o~~e:

Students who were outstanding in scholarship and campus wrongly assembled, _students who A ddresses national Home Economics honor-

Number 22

I Women's Day Plans Announced; All Women Must Attend Assembly Fnday At 1 1 a.m.

eadcrship at the annual cholaslic Honors and Senior Day as- have recet\'ed defective books are ary, at a recent meeting. Other embly in the gymnasium were awarded honors May H. Prof. H. requested to return them to the )lontana State college faculty officers elected were Ruth Mae There will be a special Women's Day assembly Friday, l\1ay ;. ;,,lerriam, head of the English department at illontana State }lontanan office at once. members will soon begin a series Poetter, vice-president; Joyce 23. at 11 a. m .. w_hich all wo,~en studen_ls _are expected to attend. mhersil) • deli\ered the principl address. and Dr. R. R. Renne, pres- This error was not discovered of high school commencement ad- Mansbridge, recording secretary; The purpose. of tins ~ssembly is to fam1hranze ,the women with the dent of the college, presided. 1 before because the sample book dresses in many Montana cities. Phyllis Todd corresponding secre- parts the) will play 111 the program on ~omens Day, Iay 31. The

In announcing the indmdual sent in ads-ance of the fo·st ship-, Dr. Klemme will make lhe bac- tary· Betty Don McMillan treas- \'i'omen's Da) chairman for next year will be announced, the AWS tudent honors, D1·. Renne named Final Exam Schedule ment was correctly assembled. _At calaureate address at Belgrade urer; Blanche Franklin, hi~torian; I officers installed, and th~ Big·L_i.ttle Sister Captains announced at anet Helen Stentz of Kalispell least one _,d,·asdreported as having ' High school on May 18 ar.d the Georgia Mooney librarian· Mar- this a,sembly. The follO\llng nollce has been posted: he winner of the Deane B. The faculty has approved m- pages ups1 own. jorie Roberts m

1

usician· l\farjorie ~) "Attendance at the Women'• a t· f r· I

O d f e. commencement address for the , , Day assembly at 11 a m Friday wing le scholarship in bacteriology ugura ion ° a new ma ex- ne e ect1\·e book has the fol Pott marshal · Jeanette Stevens · · '

lid botan ~. amination schedule, beginning 1 . \V , - nurse graduates of the Great Falls ed,·to'r· and To,dd Hagelund chap'. )lay 23, is absolutely compulsory. ~ ~wmg error~ : o~en s coopera- Deaconess hos.pita! on June 14. , '

Charles N. Dougherty of Butte with the fall quarter of 1947- t1ve house picture 1s left out and lain. Roll call will be taken by the fol-~ceived the Montana State Socie- 48· Pi Phi appears twice (paaes 129- Speaking on "Brainpower, Our The same evening the following lowing girls: f of Engineers Gold Medal Under the new schedule, fi- 133); Phi Kappa Alpha pic'ture ap· 1 Only Hope for the Future" Dr. girls were initiated into Phi U. : Freshmen, Carol Kelly; sopho-~ward in Engineering from C. lf. I nal examinations will be two pears as Sigma Chi (page 143). Lloj:d Be_rg, head of the Chem1.cal Dorothy Balch, Elaine Helene, mores, Betty Don MacMillan; jun-teele, president of the society. hours in length, one examina- Engrneermg department, w 1 11 Thelma Stenmark, Joyce l\fans- iors, Carol Seebart; seniors, Jan-Along with \Villiam "~ood of tion for each course, rather ~peak at Harrison, May 14; Turn- bridge, Betty Don McMillan, Mary ice Gaines.

ozeman, Dougherty also recciv- than the present method of us- Tau Beta Ph1' er, i\lay 28 and Harlem, !\fay w. Lou Pasha, Jeanette Stevens, Phy]- Nancy Austin will give a brief :l the Phi Kappa Phi award pre-I ing the last scheduled class Chosing "Youth in Demand" for lis Todd, Rachel Batch, and Georg- history of past \Vomen's Days, and :?nted annually to the outstanding hours for examination purpos· I , , ]

3 his topic, Dr. Harold F. Hollands ia Mooney. Girls are chosen for Eileen Reiquam, chairman, will ex-

cudent. This year marked the I es. n1t1ates of the agricultural economics and Phi u. out of the upper two-fifths plain the day's activities. Nancy rst time the award was made i sociology departments, will be at o( their class, for their interest Stenson will give a report on the > two students. H. G. Halcro\\", , President R enne Tau Beta Pi, national engineer-, Lonepine, May 19; Belt, May 20, in Home Economics, their leader- A.W.S. conference in Minneapolis resident of the fraternity, said I . . ing honorary fraternity, initiated Highwood, May 21; Cascade, May ship and spirit of cooperation. which she and Pat Geary attended. 0 choice could be made between w 111 Go r O I thirteen new undergraduate mem- 22, and Dutton, May 23. Women's lJay ribbons will be 1e two recipients of the honor. b Titus Kurtichanov, assistant sold by the Spurs ,vednesday and To John Wright of Livingston England In August e,s and three g,adu_ate members professor of English, WIii speak Collegiate Chapter lhursday, May 28 and 29, in the

ent the Phi Sigma biological. at mitiatwn ce,emomes )1ay 12· on "Your Future and Your For- • lobby of the SUH, from 9:00 to ater~ity award for outstanding Dr. R. R. Renne, president of As pledges, the undergraduate tune-They're What You Make l Elects Officers EILEEN REIQUAM 5:00. The price will be $1.00, and or~ _in the field of science. Montana State college, has been members were required to wear

I Them" at Custer, May 21 and Hy- chairman of " romen's Day. everyone, except Spurs and Sen·

lmtiates of Phi Kappa Phi, sci1o- named a member of the Ameri-

1

large brass bents, emblems of Tau sham, May 22. On May 5, 19471 the Collegiate iors, are required 00 have them. stic ~onorary fraternity, are; can delegation lo attend the In- Beta P1, which they. had polished I R. H. Palmer, professor of ag- Chapter held their annual election Bobcat Band Takes Women's Day grew out of or-Patr1c1a Chapman, Ch a r I e 8 ternational Conference of Agticul- !ro~1 t_he rough .cas.tmgs. Also on ricultural education, will speak on of officers. The following mem- ,ganizational advancement of wo-

o~gherty, Jeanne Emery, Janice tural Economists, to be held at theu· hst of dutie~ was the large j hThe Next Frontier" at Hobson, T D T · men on the campus. As early as aines, John Heidt, Fred Krings, Dartington Hall, Totnes, South bent on the lawn in front of the I May 21 and Moore, May 22. bers were elected: President, Lew- WO- ay np 1914 there were women's assemb-rances MacGowan, Floyd Pah- Devon, England, the last week engineering building, as a High is Anderson; Vice Presidtmt, Or- \ lies when alumnae came and some sh, Charles Rohde, Don a Id of August and first week of Sep- School week project. ville Thompson; Secretary, Floyd The forty eight members of the marked honor was paid each of :.harff, Rudolph Schneider, Eu- tember. The American dekigat.ion Those receiving gold bents Mon- 1 Pl b T' k t Jenni· Treasurer Ray Jenson· 'Re- Bobcat band, under the direction of the retur·dng Yisitors. These as-ene Wllde, William Wood, Ruth is limited to twenty re1aesenta- 1 day night were: Leslie Cowan, Ar- '1 ay oy IC e s porte;, Dean R;bertson; Sen~inel, Mr. Lou Howard, returned Friday semblies occorred toward the end 'oodruff, Raymond Erickson, tives. nold Draper, Harold Sitzman, Q s l N Wil son Burley. \ evening from their two-day trip, of the year. Then the Women's :ra_ri,on Sna_pp, R. F. Brebrick, A grant. from the Jt'ergu,jon Paul Hippely, Donald Fisk, Don- Il a e OW L t B. r· League committee worked on a lI R Th program of work for the stopping at ivmgs on, ig im -1 1am e1quam, Rhoda Hover- Foundation to the U. S. A. CollHCi! aid Sauipson, Lawrence Lakey, ! e I b . B II Laurel and Colum- plan for ju&t one special Wo-

,n, Frances Oswald, Graeme Bak- of the American Farm Econon11cs. George Ruzicka, Bill Kelly, David Tickets are now on sale for past year was discussed by Past ei' 1 mgs, ' men's Assembly to be held near ·, Arthur Parsons and Robert association will assist delegates in McCollough, Paul Poirier, Eugene I "The Playboy of the Western President Jim Schultz, and several I bus. the closing of the school year. -owe def · t I \\'"Id d B'II L II Th d ' \V Id" th t· k t b th · The band left the college on O l\I 26 1923 th f" W · raying rave expenses. 1 e, an 1 • ~1~e . e gra - or at e 1c e oo m items were recommended for the j Th --d , M , 15 via the l\l.S.C. n ay , , e 1rst o-The following faculty members

1 L. K. Elmhirst of England is uate members m1t1ated were: E.

1

front of the SUB. Students only new officers to carry out ui.s aJ, aJd ' ·t f'. t men's Day was held with over 200 •re •!so named to Ph" K p "d f h \V S h" . D f E . . . . . . . special bus an gave 1 s ns con- h - • 1 appa res, ent o t e International Con- . c 111mg, ean o ngmeermg, need present then· activity tickets After the meeting Dr p 1 er L" . t h" h h I girls participating in t e most im-''li.: Dr. L. 0. Brockmarn, Dr. ference, and Dr. Asher Hobson, P f F d C H t' h d ht · d t Th d I ' · 8 m ' cert at the ivmgs on ig sc 00

• t th 11 h d ro re . . omann, ~c in~ ea to. o. am ~eserve sea s. e a - chapter adviser, invited all the that morning. High school con- press1ve even e co ege • a 1Il S. Eckert, Dr. V. E. Iver~on, President of the American Farm of the Mechanical Engmeermg de- m1ss1on pnce for all, except stu- members of the chapte t tt d . t B" T' b ever witnessed. The girls, wear­iss Martha L .Hawksworlh ~ind Econon11·cs assoc,·at,·on ,·s Cha·,,._ t d R' h I R Th d · h · · · · k r O a en certs were given a ig 1111 er · h"t k" t d b · ht! I par ment, an 1c arc . om- ~nts wit their activit! tic ets, a picnic at his ranch

1 Friday, May ii in s· out-door concerts mg w I e s tr s an ng Y co -

• "illiam G .Walter. man of the United St;tes Council. as, 1923 graduate of M.S.C., now Will be $.75 for the first floor 116

th

I and B_ 1 g ' th bl" t La __ ored sweaters, marched across the

Phi Eta Sigma. freshman hon- with Westinghouse Electrical cor- and first balcony, and $.65 for the · were given for e pu ic a ui campus from Main Hall to the Ag-ary fraternity initiates ware: President R. R. Renne will ad- poration. second balcony. All seats will be el and Columbus. , . riculture building. At this point David Davidson, Merle Irvine, dress the annual meeting of the For the first time in this chap- sold on first come-best seat basis. Officers Elected At I The Bobcat ba~d \\ as organized the ceremony of Breaking the Ties tymond Kelley, Henry Lorentz, North Montana State Fair Board ter's history, a woman student has All seats are open to students and by Lou Howard 1dn 1

39306 ~;\since was carried out. As the junior

,nnis Nelson, Earl Rangitsch, at its dinner at the Rainbow Ho- been elected to honorary member- the general public. 4-H Alumni Meet I that tune has! meda e r" t e our~ and senior line separated, the mis Smith, Roland G. Sof•, Ev- tel in Great Falls on Thursday h' R . . f th , Enjoyment plus, is assured the I They have P ay m O owns an girls crossed over and Dean Her-tt W 111 . M s ip. ec1p1ent o e woman s . . . ' ·I ntana includmg all

e aage, artin Whalen , Jack evemng, ay 22. His subject is badge was Miss Frances McGow- audience as the Irish drama un- At the last regular meetmg of c1t1es 111 "o . F rick broke the streamers between !win Bailey, Lloyd Busma, James "The Development of Agriculture an senior architecture student. folds with laughter and Irish hu- the 4-H Alumni club held Wed- but four coundt,hes. . or m: n/ the marchers. From here the pro-ouch, Donald Baldridge, David Through Fairs". Th' d ted t h mor. Combining with the cast to nesday night ,·n the Agr"iculture years the ban as iourneye O cession continued to the gym. B e awar was presen o er 1 f th Washing-

artley, Marvin T. Beatty. Also on the program for the at the banquet following the in- present this play, ll!ay 28 and 29, building, new officers were elected. Hel,enab' tothdp ay e~erbrat~on at the In 1924, the processional started I James T. Brown, Vern W. dinner is the Montana State Col- itiation of the above members. will be the lilting strains of the They are: President, Bill Saund- tons ,r ay c from Montana hall and proceeded

own, Milton H. Campbell, Ralph lege Chorus of forty members ' Montana State College Symphon- ers; Vice-President, Betty Don Legislature. to the gym. The custom of choos-·Sg,-i!f, Haydn Ferguson, Donald under the direction of Conrad J. ' ette, under the able direction of MacMillan; Secretary, Phy 11 is In 1939 the band played to over ing the Women's Day speaker of aff, Albert Heetderks, Jack Sandvig. The chorus will leave All girls plannin g to a ttend Mr. Edmund Sedivy. Todd; Treasurer, Rhua Slavens; 3 000 people on Montana day at five years in advance f r om the >ward, Albert Kraft, Robert Lin- Bozeman by char ter bus on school during t he Summer Ses- Reporter, Rosalie Mueller. The the San Francisco Exposition. At graduating class was also started

~~' t:~~i: ~~:::~, J;h: n~:1i Thi~s~:~u:~~;: Dr. Renne will ad- ~! o~ :::::to': ~:'/i"1:1rru~r;'~!~ Li~::}~1::~;~n:~:m: ! ~;a: :~/~; :~~:;n~r;fg~~:s ~~r:~;,pr~:~:~ !~~;/~::c!~:: a:;:~da:~ % pi:; ~7rs!

9;!~ii!::~;"o/:~i~":w::; :~:

7. hlichtig, Howard Snow Rohcrt dress the annual meeting of the less special ar rangements are Montana Stat,, College to a tea Snapp, Betty Don MacMillan, and Francisco, San Jose, and Portland. she came back to give her address ickier, Marvin Swens~n, Jlar- Montana Stock Growers associa- made in advance with the Stu- honoring Mrs. Lois Butler Payson Martha Wright. This year they travelled to San in l930. ,d Goudie, Robert Helm, Paul tion at Butte on "Plans for De- dent Welfare office. These ar- on Thursday afternoon, May 29, The club will hold a spring pie- Diego to support the football team In 1926, Spurs took over and noen, Charles Masten, Thomas velopment of Livestock Research rangements should be made as "la:30-6 :00 p. m. in the Fireplace n ic, May 25 at Spring Hill and at the New Year's day game in made all of the plans for Wo-

(Continued on page three) and Instruction Work" . scion as possible. room, Herrick Hall. all members are invited to attend. the Harbor Bowl. (Continued on page two)

Page 2: ·Renne Will Confer Degrees Ion 184 Seniors; McCain Will Speak

PAGE TWO MO~TANA EXPONENT Wednesday, ~lay 21, 1947

JM.S.C. Needs a Field Houae Students, Apply Dr. Eckert Gets I =~~·.~:·here they will rejoin Dr.

Montana State college needs a fie ld house! This is a point that F p • A A • Dr. Eckert has b~n granted a

MONTANA EXPONENT PRINTED BY THE ARTCRAIT PRINTERS

has been questioned and con&idered for some few years. 1t is only of or erm1ts g ss1gnment leave of absence to permit him to late, during these post-war months and under our very cro,Hled con· • assume his new work which will

Acceptance for J\lailing at Special Rate of Postage Provided for ditions, that the need has been ~o urgently broug.ht to lighL TO Register In Costa Rica include .a. study of the duties and in Section 1103, Act of October 3, 1927, Authorized Feb. 17, 1919 Bozeman weather do,s not m any way provide for satisfactory I respons1b1ht1es of the department

ed scheduling of any outside e,·ents. Hazardous weather conditions take Each student who plans to reg- 0 Ph"l S E k t h d f th of economics and rural welfare lll Continuance of Weekly Exponent and lllonthly Exponent Found d th . d rt h · h · ht ·1 r. 1 · c er , ea O e th · n te 1 1895. Publ ·, -Led every Wednesday of the Colle0uc Year by the a way 3 good eal of the _en us iasrn an suppa w IC mig ensi Y, ister Autumn Quarter, 1947, must department of agricultural econ- e in I u ; an ana Y_sis of the

::iit and would norma lly go with these programs. . . farm real estate appraisal system Associated tudents of i\Iontana State College, Bozeman, l\1ontana. Gymnasi um facilit ies were at best.. cozy, prior to the \\> a r . Now. fill out a card indicating his inten- om1cs and rural sociology at Mon- of Costa Rica and how it may be EDITOR Ruth Dobler with the campus almost double in enrollment the oonditions a re ob- tions before the end of the spr ing Lana State co1lege, has just ac-l appli~ to other .Lat~n-American

' · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · p,;~~~ · ii9 · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ,,ious. quarter. About the first of Aug- cepted n six months assignment as I cou~tries, and an inquiry into the BUSL'J ESS MANAGER ..... . ..................... Bob Henderson \V e went through this last season having basketball operate at ust a uPer mit to Regi· t er" wil l a consultant in agricultural credi t various phases of coffee produc-

Phone 188 a financial loss, and at the same time, by necessity, turned awny be sent to each student who has I with the Inter-American Institute I tion. . _ Associate Editors: Stuart Stone, Bob Anspach. spectators because of crowded conditions. And to add insult to in- indicated that he intends to return of Agricultural Sciences at Turri- ReAprese~tahves fro.m 1~ of the Sports Editor . ................. .. ... . , . ... , · · · · , . , Harold Young jury the students were restricted to witness only one hali of our !or th autmun quarter. No stu- . Pan. merican countries make up

Phone 861 . ., ho~1e games. dent t~l8Y register for college a lba , Costa Rica. He will report the. personnel of the institute. Tne Assista~t Sports E~itor . .... ... ........... . .. ..... ...... Ralp~ FD< Montana State coHege is at present forced to depend ~olely on autumn quarter without a "per- there shortly after July 1 and will United States departments of 3tate Wo~en s S?orts Editor . ······ · ··············· ···· .Hele; B_uc~ ou:e footbalJ to support financially al l ot her athletic endea ,·ors on the mit to Register". and agriculture and the Pan-Amt>~ Society Editor · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·P·h·o'ne" · 4· 8· ~ · · · · · • · · · · · · · · · arte ys e campus. This, as can easily be seen, pro,·ides adequately for neither . . ican union cooperated in ~ecuring

" Cards are available for this pur-

1

th . f D E k Circulation Manager ......... . ..................... Ralph Tipling flootball nor the other .sports. . . pose on a table in the hall outside e sernces o r. c e.rt. Business Staff: Jack Gri!iiths, Lois Cass, Jim Good, 1'-fartha Saunders., Agriculture shows, and student assemblies are two oth~~ maJor the Registrar's office in Montana

Pat Hammond, J oan Hoiness, Don Langohr, Earl Bradford. functions that have suffered heavily from over-crowded conditions. hall. Please fill out the card and News ~~ff: Floren~e Koenig, Don \\~oo_dside, S~irley Brooks, Mar- Funds for a building as is needed here would approach closely deposit it in th e box provided. Do

Jorie Pott, Ahce Stork, George Heide, B. K. Beers, Don Graif, 1 •-00 000 Th · might seem to be an amount in excess of what might not fail to do this if you plan to Bill Odneal Linda Bliler, Dorothy Butler, Renetta Lav.'Tence, ,,<> , • is . . Denny Condota, Donna Hunter, Paul Hippely, Alice Johnson, plausibly be subscribed to by residents of the State of Montana, aJ. register next fall. lf there is any

Jean Swanson, John Haynes, Jack Griffiths, :Maynard Mountjoy, l umni, and friends of the institution. I rather doubt that Mont.a~a chance of your returning to college Marian Mitchell. has never been backward in standing solidly behind any worthwhile in the fall, please be sure to sign

Art Staff: .Robert Vine, Yvonne McLeish, Leila ¥oniger, Pat Jelin~k financial endeavor. This is Montana, the TrPasure State. up. Jn case you do not return, Circulation Staff: Elizabeth Tabor, James H. Smith, Pat Dolan, Shir- . . . . · t h th' · e . no damage will have been done.

ley Johnson, June Tracy, Betty Walden, Martha Saunders. \\'bile ind1v1dual subscription to. a proJec sue as 1s ~s n \\ Photography: James Clausen, Corlee \Vrigbt. here, it has been in effect for some time throughout other se~t_i~ns of H~wever, if you do not fi11 out Typists: Phyllis Todd, Ruth Killeen, Pat Lavery. the country, and has aided greatly in the expansion and fac1hties of this card, a~d re~urn, your autumn

these other fine st.ate schools. quarter reg1strallon may be delay-

Speaking Plainly ... I Fr.om 1920 until 1945 individuals of California co~lributed over Jed pending th~ collection of regis-43 million to the U. of C. During that same ~riod cit izens of Jll- tration material for you~

With the publication of the last E.'\POl\'E;\'T for the year we I inois pri,•ately bequesled over 7 12 million lo their Stale un_iven;ity, Autumn quarter registration for would like to clear up a few important issues that haYe arisen the Minnesota over 18 million, Pennsylvania more than 36 milhon, a nd all students other than new fresh­past few months. Texas almost 14. millio1L Jn the last 50 years ?.Lontana State college men wi]J be by number. Numbers

has received less than 20 thousand dollars in s imilar donations. for registration will be issued First, ''faculty censorship"' of the i\10!\TA.t'IA EXPONENT The State Legislature at Helena has realized the dire situation from the Registrar's office begin-

DR. PHIL S. ECKERT

JERSEY DAIRY ~5 N. Tracy

Phone 616

ME 'S SWIM TRU KS does not exist No member of the faculty sees the copy before it is at both the University and here at the State college. State funds ning at 9 a. m. Friday, September

taken to the printer, or, in fact, until the paper is circulated on the for new building such as field houses at the two schools, is critically 25 to students presenting a "Per- r emain until Dec. 31, 1947. campus. We think the past few weeks has proved this. We do feel, · h · l' 1· t by however, that the faculty has an equal right to express their opin- limited, however, they have granted permission to t e ms it.u ions o mit to Register". Numbers will

ask for financial aid from individuals to build these desperately need- be issued in consecutive order. Ad-ions in the student paper if they choose to do so. ed athletic plants. I miltance of upperclassmen to the

On occasion, a "Letter to the Editor'' is received in this office Can the Montanans do it? I believe so. It will be up to each I gymnasium for registration Mon-that requires clarification by some member of the faculty in such and every one of us to show our spirit, and to contribute in so far day and Tuesday, September 29 cases we consult with a faculty member. The information received as we are financially able, for a project as worthy and as necessary and 30 will be by number. This is printed with the ''Letter" to enable the readers to understand as this. sy tern will do away with admit­what they are reading. A new field house will allow us as fine a physical education pro· tanee to registration by the sl-

Our second gripe is the majority of the students of l\LS.C. gram as is available anyw here in the country. Al l students, both phabetical sequence used this past They typify the decadence and general decline of the human race. men and co-eds, will be able to partcipiate in a well rounded athletic year. Each student will present Their greatest contribution (they think) to the betterment of the program so necessary to the health and physical development of our his "Permit to Register" for se­world is rampant, baseless, thoughtlessly applied destructive criti. rising generation. " re will have space for 4-H shows, a Farm and curing hjs own registration num­cism. Their greatest talent is to attempt improvemenl through vitup· Home Week, State high school athletic tournaments, sufficient seal- ber. Each student will thus be re­eration. Their entire vocabulary consists of stock words and phrases ing for all persons at basketball games, horticulture shows, inside spon 'ble for his own place in the which they apply unstintingly to eyerything they encounter. athletic. events, an extensive intramural program, worth" hile social registration line. j

For example, our EXPOl\'L\'T, during the year, has experienc· events. 11.nd a pince for pep rallies and student assembli":'. •••••••••••••••••••••••• I ed a relationship \\;LI, the aforementioned qualities of this deterior- We must back this project. ~lontana c_an back. this _nece,,..ary I ating race. Criticisms of our paper }1aye been applied vociferously cause. ,,-e did during the \\ a r, we can certamly do 1t agarn. ~ and Yiolentlv behind our backs. Those which we were fortunate . . .

11 WOIVUf 114

enough to r;ceive lo our faces were void of any constructive value. It is im!)erattYC that a ne" aJ.o«.t. Yet, Ll10se who cry out in protest suddenly become silent when con- AG D's to Meet senate m~mbers be at the meet· ', ~ fronted will, Ll1e opportunity to help remedy Lite conditions about ing tonight at 5 !). m.

which they complain. I B ff c d .-... There is no logical reason why e,·ery organized house, e\"ery n an ' ana a fl I fa ly .. ~, ,-:;;

organization. cannot ham a representathe on the staff of 1917-~S I een 5 ~ ~ and future Exponents. A journalism professor wa- brought to our Eighteen Alpha Gamma Deltas 1:· campus and a journali.sm course entered into the schedule of classes will attend the AGO :Sational Con-last year. We ha,e hope that e,·entually their influence will inspire ,·ention in Banff, Alberta, Canada, ~ \a-al (bop lor la:ho sludents to take more than just a reading interest in the student I June 29 through June 30. The paper. It is true that more than enou_gh students "go-out" for Ex-

1 conYention will meet at the Banff

ponent work, but we need representa!Jon. Also we need more "ho S . h t 1 h b d . . d b I Th . . I I th. prmgs o e . aYe a some trrunmg an ave ta ent. ey re ng 1t 1ere on 1s T . .· :,f'l

campus. All they need is ambition and interest. hose "ho "•ll _attend are 1 -pace does not permit us 10 delve into the complete lack of dred Hageman, Alice J ohnson,_ Pat

interest displayed by the majority of the students in L11e extra -cur- Geary, Ruth Dobler, Doreen Miller, ricular affairs of Ll1eir campus. Unfortunately this apall,y manifests Pat and Betty Anne _Haeckel ,_ llel­iL'-elf in far more monstrous and deYastating results in our ~O· en. ,Buck~ouse, )lannn Drt~ol~ called greater free society. Lois Cas.' Agnes Ragen, ut

As we l.1eemirched, bedraggled, and burned-out seniors blindly I K:lleen'. Donna Holm, Marga_ret grope our wav off !he campus. we are heartened into the hope that " alter,, Lois Hoyt, Barbara Kay a famous a ... l~onomer·s definition of the human race-A parasitic Beer~, Selma Lee Frazer, nnd Tril­fungus on a ~ta~nating planet-is not correct, \\hen we ce so mnny by Roser. eager young men and women zealou~ly climbing once again to One of the highlights of the the ":11". convention will be a trip to Lake

Louise.

Diamonds Watches

Arnold C. Durand 3 East Main Street

Phone 79.J-J

Glamorizes, highlights and luster­izes all shades of hair with Abun­dant color. NOREEN colors ore TEMPORARY ... are intended to wash out ot the next shampoo.

14 Colorful Shades. B·Rinst Package . .•

• Wilson Dr. Eckert will leave he.re for

Washington D. C., June 29 I\ here he will receive a one week indoc­trination course. He will the.n fly to Costa Rica. His wife, Eva, and children, J erry, 8, Sus:111, 5 and Karen, 2, will go to New Or­leans to board a ship for Costa

• Catalina

$2.95 to $4.50

THE HUB

TUDENTS! You can now learn to fly at a rate you can afford.

Fly the Luscombe with the FLYING COOP.

5.25 Per Hour

TUDENT

Compare the rates and you'll know why it pays to be a member of the . F. C.

Contracted with

Socl'al CalendaY.I I woman's Day- I :Uothers who plan lo attend the , 1 convention are Mrs. :\tiller, :Mrs.

I (Continued from page one_) C. Haeckel and lllrs. Walt Ragen. men's Day and the processional -----'----extended past Hamilton Hall, Her-I I

)IAY Mother's Home Made

Potato Bread

Porter's I B A . . s .

Ba..xter Hotel I ozeman VIalion ernce Friday, 23-- Pharmacy GALLATJN FJELD

........................ Pi Beta Phi Gardenia Party Saturday, 24-

Chi Omega Spring Party Alpha Omicron Pi Spring Party

rick Hall and on to the gym. I The last change of Women's KESSLER I

Day was made in 1941 when the

processional started from the DAIRY SUB lounge and proceeded past I Hamilton Hall, Herrick Hall, up

BON-TON BAKERIES

i11il§"§ ·.·=·-·=··s=··==·=-=·====-= ===·=- =·:- :-: :-: ==:-:- :-:- :-: =·====·=-=··-~

i:1) Veterans Independent Spring Formal H II V" 1k d JI! • H II •

0 "a ' aroun am a ' Pasturized Dairy Friday, 30- and to the gym. Sigma Chi Spring Party Some years ago, Mrs. Laist, a Dairy Products Pi Kappa Alpha Spring Party former resident of Anaconda, he-, . .

P g Y name to be awarded to that sen- Billin S Phi Sigma Kappa s rin Part gan a citizenship award in her 708 West Mam I Bozeman ... Missoula

Saturday, 31- ior girl who has been outstanding Phone 1539 or 1540 g Women's Day I in campus life and activities dur-

ing her four years of college. 1 ·--· -· ---- -.--- • _ -·--· _ _ _ _ _ _ -=::-Jl"NE Several years ago Mrs. La1st/ ~ ---.,- __::;;;;;::::. -·· - --- -· - · -- _.:·_"--..:::.-1

Sunday, 1- discontinued this award because ----· - --:--··-----·----.-~·.-~ ......... ·-~--Baccalaureate she was away from Montana and 1 ......___ -_;; =:-----:::·~-·-· --=......::.-~ - _;__-.--:=-;;.-=

Monday, 2- MSC, and living in New York ~.:;....;;;;~ ~~·~;.-;:a:-E_~;-:. -Commencement City. The Associated Women ---=..:-_--:- · - - -

Friday, &- I Students then took over the award -= Kappa Sigma Spring Party and continued the award in Mrs. - ::-Quarter Ends Laist's name.

I "DINE WITH DOUG' I VETERANS . . .

LET

SA _FEW A Y STORES

HELP STRETCH YOUR LIMITED FOOD DOLLARS

• • • 1111

ii) We kn<)W that it is dif-1111 f. l . (i1) ICU t to live on •'• $90.00 a 1111 11i1 ffiOnth. :-: 1111 (/) Let us help you make 1111 . ii) It go as far as possible. 1111 :,:

i ~

I ~

I ~

r The ~

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Quality Market

Page 3: ·Renne Will Confer Degrees Ion 184 Seniors; McCain Will Speak

3iB Day at Montana State

Ralph Fix, having just received his mark fr om the '·Royal 9rder of the Dlue "tit ", is about lo take a ducking as just pun­ishment for his doubtfu l journalistic ab ilities exhibi ted this

Photo by J. Clausen

MONTANA EXPONENT PAGE THREE

~IOXTANA STATE COLLEGE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATl0:-1 I H A bJ Mary Lou Pasha, Jeannette Stev- tional honorary engineering asso-Summary-Profit and Loss Statement 0Il0fS SSeffi y-- ens, and Phyllis Todd. ciation are: Robert Adams, Leslie

(The loss item includes capital additions, such as new· equipment.) I (Continued !rom page one) Initiates for the Phi Sigma, hon- owan, Robert Crecelius, Thomas Receipts: Reed, ,vrniam Richter, \\,' illiam orary biological fraternity, are: Dolan, Arnold Draper, Donald Football .............. . ................................. $28,555.281 Sanders, Fred Schmitz, Roge1 Dorothy Callan, Henry Kathrein, I Fisk, Jack Heidt, Paul Hippely, Basketball . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.508.93 Sherman. Gera ld Rowen, Janet Stentz, Frank William Kelly, Lawrence Lakey, Minor Sports ....... . ........................ .. ··~··..... 250.00 George Tobias, Victor Turner. Adams, Norman Anderson, Ros-. Gordon Lindner, William Lorell, )1iscellaneous ............ : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . 269.71 I James VanDenburg, Bayliss Cum- coe Billingham, David Bossler, David McCullough, P.aul Poirier, Bal. Student Business Office July 1, 1946................. 3i168.30 I mmgs, J ohn Donohoe, Donald Duane Brobst, Dorothy Butler, Dan Popovac, Donald Samson, Bal. M.S.C. Athletic Ass'n. July 1, 1946.. . ................. 63.21 Bauer, \Y1.lbur Bennington, John Theodore Chemodurow, Jean Dor- Donald Schurch, Harold Sitzman,

I Student Activity Fees to May 1, 1947 .............•....... 19,851.14 Brown, Reginald Call, Denny Con· 1 sett, Theodore Johnson, Garnet George Ruzicka, and Eugene Student Act1v1ty Fees Due (estimated).................... 8,500.00 I dotta, Albert Curry, Bobby Gem- Kotkm, Renetta Lawrence, Char- Wilde.

TOTAL .... .. ....................•..•.. . ......... $69,166.57 mell, Gerre Hawk, Robert Hoss- Jes Purkett, Paul R1egert, Doris . For the first time a woman Ex1>enctitures: feld, David Hurst. Herman Kraus. Seel, Joseph 'l"o"nsend, George engineering student was awarded Football ....... ... .......... . .. .. ...................... . $35,257.07 Clarence :Mehl, James Poynter, VanDelinder, Viola Walstad, John the Tau Beta Phi woman's badge; Football training table due and payable May 6, 1947.. ..... 8,749.52 Glen Salo, Gilbert Smith, Frank Wright, Grlint Wooley, George she is Frances J\lacGowan. Basketball .. .... ... . . . ........ . ......................• .. 15,164.57 Stefanich, Clarence Swanson, Jack York, ".illiam Sippel, Lou mith, Initiates for Pi Kappa Delta, Basketball training table due and payable May 6, 1947. . . . . . 1,520.68 Thompson, Ernest Timm, Duane and Hubert Prescott. honorary foren~ics society, are: Boxing, wrestling, s,,imming awards, estimated .... .. ...... 814.76 Welsh, Dale Za_dow, Arno~d Vv~a~- New members of the Alph.a T~u l Charles ~ougherty, Jim Va1:. ~en-Track . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10.68 ama, Stanley \echa, Daniel Deni- Delta honorary nurses soronty m- burg, Milton Campbell, W1lham Baseball . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . 68.68 son, Lyndon Gemmill, John Ne--

1 elude : Marie Hinck, Dorothy Vor- Reid, John Webster, Mo1·ry Irvine,

Tennis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73.65 son, E,·erett \Yaage, \Vinston Ac- ell, J ennie Pemble, Peggy Orcutt, Maynard Mountjoy. \Yomen's Athletics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . 442.13 ton, Roy Dunn, George Engstrom, Marian Hyer, Esther Peterson, Named as Knight of Knights, Intramural (Intercollegiate Skiing and boxing)............ 1,602.84 Howard Holtan, Nick Kleinschmidt, and Alice Rasmussen. outstanding member of the Fangs, First Aid . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 663.02 Marshall 1\IcPeck, Wyman Nyquist, Initiates for the Alpha Psi Om- men's serv ice organization, by the Conference . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . 646.42 James Purcell, Thomas Robischon, ega honorary dramatics society Spurs, women's service organiza-Administrative ...• .... •.......... ... .. ................. . . 1,289.59 James Sargent. are: Beth Ann Dole, Douglas and tion, was Robert Stanbury. Miscellaneous . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 189.12 Kenneth Anderson, Theodore Allan Morrison, Donald Woodside, Chosen as Spur of the 11oment

TOTAL ............... . ....................... . .. $66,492.73 Barr, J ohn Baskett, J ohn Beumee, Frances Tes.low, Renetta Lawrence, by the Fangs was Betty DeKay. tote : Estimated expenditures for balance of 1947 school year: Ellis Callantine, Earl Douglas , Adena Parsons, Gordon Meagher, New pledges for Spartanians,

Conference trip . . .. .......... ... ........ . , ... .. . $ 75.00 Frede1·ick Edson, Granville Edg~ Dorothy Frankovich, Kay McCon- women's athletic honorary soc.ie-Women's playday archery equipment awards . .. ,.. 350.00 mond, Gordon Linscott, Earl Lyn~ nell and Jim Kiefer. ty are: Charlotte Kinkleman, Rel-Awards (Basketball, $280) Minor sports, $420 .. ... 700.00 gass, J ohn Mendel, .Hen ry Moe, New members of the Electrons, en Buckhouse, Zoe Wilkins, Eloise Administrative (contact trips)........... .. . ...... 300.00 Yictor Smith, Dale Swanson, Rob- , h~norary women's chemistry so- Vander Beisen and Frances Thom-

TOTAL ..... ...... .... . .. ......... .... ... . . $ 2,125.00 ert Sweet, Homer Tilton, and c1ety, are : Kay McConnell and as. J ames ,veaver. Shirley Bridges. New members of Septemviri, Profit and Loss Statement., Football, Year 1946-1947

Receipts: Initiates for Alpha Lambda Del- Ini tiates for Alpha Chi Sigma, senior men's honorary society are:

Gate Receipts . . ..... .. . .... ... . ......................... $ 6,585.07 ta, freshmen women scholastic honorar y men's chemistl.·y society Gene Bourdet, Robert Crowe, Mag-honorary society are: are: nar Ronning, J ames Lyons, Dana

Laurel Peterson, J ean Crecel- H oward Brandeland, Jack Schrupp, Keith Seaton and Paul ius, Clara Quinnell, Pat Lavery, Gaines, Harry Herzel, WiJlis John- Poirier.

Guarantees . ... . ......... .. .. . ...... .. ........ ... .. . ... . . . 16,050.00 Splits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . 5,920.21

TOTAL .......•.. .. ........ .... ........ .. . .•. . ... $28,555.28 Marion Hyer, Pat Haeckel, Elsie ston, Walter Luke, Gordon Mc- Dr. Renne announced the fol·

$ - 89 98 Varcoe, Geraldine Fitzgerald, Mer- Leod, Edward Parmelee, Paul Pie- lowing as belonging to the Big Equipment · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·

0•4

·- le Isaac, and Martha Saunders. ton, Earl Turner, William Van Ten: Robert Balch, Mrs. Marvel Home Game Guar~ntees · · · · · · · · · · • · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ··· · 4

,55

0.00 New member s for Pi Omega P i, Horn, William Wood, Perry Yob, Braziel, Morris Guay, Frances Rae Home Game Off1c1als .. ...... . . .. ... . .• .... . ......... . .. · 912.94 ta · 1 f · l ·t R b Trip Expense ............................. .. .. ..... . .. .. 15,723.67 secre ria pro es.s10na sorori Y, o ert Crow, John Laakso, Milton MacGowan, Ruth McDonald, Fran-Field Expense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . 265.371 are: Nancy. Austm, Nancy Sten- Raile, and A. R. Johansson • ces Oswald, Victor Smith, Rausie Tickets, sales tax, Butte and Great Falls games.......... 3,679.75 ~on, Jane Gilbert, Elvira Steffan- Alpha Zeta honorary agricultur- Lou Solberg, Joseph Urick, Ed-Advertising ... . . . . ..... .. .... . . '. .. ... .. ..... .. .. ... ..... 1 048 86 1c and Peggy Conrad. al fraternity initiates are: Ray ward Dean Vaughan. Miscellaneous (500 to band, Harbor Bowl)................. 1 001.95 Initiates for Delta Phi Delta, Greer, Marion Hedegaard, Mark Chosen on the Mortar Board Scouting. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . '552:85 h_onorary art and architecture so- J ennings, James Schultz, Jack were : Nancy Austin, Elizabeth Training Table . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . 1 066 20 c1ety are: Galt, Dean Robertson, Raymond Haglund, Nancy Stenson, Lavonne Training Table (due and payable May 6, 1947). .... ...... . 8,749.52 Sam Goutanis, Bill Strickladen, Agee, Vernon Pacovsky, and Wil- West, Barbara Kay Beers, Lois

' · Ardean Fialka, and Joy Reeder. bur West Hoyt, Jean Stevenson, Alice Sugi-Awards · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·' · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·

766·20

Delta Phi Delta pledges include Initiates for Tau Beta Phi n.a- moto, and Alice Hughes. TOTAL · · · · · · ·'· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · .$

44,006.

59 Lois Cass, Wayne Coffman, Rob>4'· :;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,-:

NET LOSS . ··· ·· ·· ··········· · · ··········•···''•····· l 5,451.3l erta Davis, Vernon Drake, Ed Eck, Profit and Loss Statement, Basketball, Year 1946-1947 Pat Galt, Cal Hoiland, Pat J elin-

Receipts: ek, Harrison Lane, Leila Moniger, Gate Receipts ..... . ...... · · . · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · $ 3,755.70 George Page, Eileen Penland, Eu-

4,030.00 gene Price, Paul Schofield, Char-Profit Splits . ...........• · · · • · · · · • · · · · · · • · · · · · · · · · · · · · · 723.23 Jes Stablein and Robert Story.

TOTAL ... ...... . ..... •... . .. ... .. · · • · · · · · · · · · .$ 8,508.93 New Phi Upsilon Omicron, hon-Expenditures orary home economics sorority, in-Equipment . . .. . . ............. · • · · · · · · · ·. · ·. · · · · · · · · · • · · · . $ 879.66

1

itiates are: Rosemary Kirk, Mary Home game guarantees ................•...... · · · · · · .... · · 2,900.00 Willick, Ruth Mae Potter, Maree­Home game officials · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · 651.20 line Yates, Dorothy Balch, Elaine

Accept a gift from JACQUELINE COCHRAN at Roechers Beauty Bar. To introduce this new, distinctive beauty line, a dollar size jar of Chromablend powder base, expertly blended for you by Miss Lillian Brye, New York representa. tive, will be given free with your purchase of any Jacqueline Cochran facial preparation or make up item. Chromablend and Face Powder are blended to your individual type and coloring at ...•

Trip expense . . ........... .. .... . ........... · · · · · · · · · · · · 8,327.391 Heleen Joyce Mansbridge, Thelma Floor Expense ........... . · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · 55.21 Stend~ark, Rachel Batch, Betty Prescriptions a Specwlty Ticket sales and tax (Bobcat-Wyo. Tickets Billings game).. 1,103.03 Don McMillan, Georgia Mooney, •

Roecher Drug Company Advertising .. ... .... ........... . ..... .... .. . . .,. . . . . . . . . . 48.28 ::.:::__:..:..::.::.:.:_::::_:~~==========================~ Miscellaneous . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82.90 Awards for 1946 . . . . . . . . . • . • . . . • . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . • • . • . . . . 269.15 Training table . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . 567.75 Training table due and payable May 6, 1947.... . . . . . . . • . . 1,620.68 Awards (estimated) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 280.00

TOTAL ............................... . .......... $16,685.25 NET LOSS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8,176.32

Profit and Loss Statement, Swim.ming, Boxing, \Yres tling Year 1946-1947

Receipts: Guarantees .........•. . ...... ... ... . . ...............•... $ Expenditures : Equipment ............. . . ... . .. ........... .. .... ....... . $ Trip Expenses .....•..... . .... ......... . . ...•............ A,vards ..... ... ......•....... , ... · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·

TOTAL ...... .. . , ..........................•. , ..... . $ NET LOSS ... ....... . .......... . .. ... . •..... . ....

Detailed Expenses Administrative ExpeDS<!s:

250.00

27.21 527.55 260.00 814.76 564.76 I

Stationery and Printing ... .... ... ...... . ..... • .. . ....... $ 55.42 Telepbone and Telegraph . .............•..... .. , •. , . . . • . • 330.14 Contact Trips ... ...... . .... ,. . . . . . . . • . • . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . 595.67

seum. Not just a building with Miscellaneous .. .... .. ... .. ... ..•......•. • .......... . , . . . 64.50 , some books, but an atmosphere Student Business Office . . . . . . • . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 243.86 I in which an institution might TOTAL ...... . ... , . . ..... .' ... •.. .................. $ 1,289.59

grow and flourish. Track: There are many on the campus It was, in large measure, be- , ! quii;,::'11nt ..... .. ... .. . . ... ... ......... • ........ • ....... $

10 are new, students and facul t cause of this vision and courage as~ : •..• • •••••••••..•.•...•.•...••••••.•••••••••• $ eluded. Perhaps those who ar~ that a number of the faculty, sev- Equipment

w ought to know (and the con- era! student organizati?ns,. ~nd Tenrus: n. poraries ought to recall) the I some friends of the . rnstitut10n Equipment .............•............... . .... . . ......... $ irit in which Olga Ross Hannon scra~ed together funds m 1941 for Trip Expense ................. . . • ... . .. .. ..... .. .. ... ... ed and worked. a tnp to New York Mth the ob- Equipment Estimated .. .. .................. . ........... .

l! Besides the man . h ·h·t ject of _asking the. Rockefeller and TOTAL ....... . ..... .... ..... . ........ ......... .. $ . h ct·d f by ct" ort " 1 e Carnegie Foundations for help. It DETAILED EXPENSES rngs s e 1 or er epartment h" · . \\' • Athl t· d f A t h I ct· ' was t 1s same spmt that nurtur- <>mens e ,cs:

or r • s e 8

so. id more ed the hope that perhaps some Equipment · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · $ ·~- her _share for the m~titution. Montanans might aid in building Play Day trip (Estimated) ..... • ................. • .... . .

10.68

68.68

5.40 8.25

60.00 73.65

135.13 80.00

227.00 Ii 1th v1s10n and_ enthusiasm she I more adequately for !lfontana's ed- Equipment (estimated) .. .. ................... · · · · · · · · · · · · 1ve to give reality to her ideals ucation. TOTAL ......................... , ................ $ 442.13 ' the institution. She served Events in Montana suggest a Intramural: Tumbling and Skiing thfully on a committee which long postponement in the mater- Equipment .................... . . .. • ... . ...... , ...... . .. $ 390.64 d ambitious plans for a library ializing of a vision. Perhaps this Trip Expense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 962.20 tl a museum. She was challeng- comes with poignant impress upon Awards (estimated) ................................ , . . . . 260.00

at s":ing those . plans cut those who dare to have ideals. TOTAL .......... • . . . ... . ...... . .... . • ... • ....... $ 1,602.84 wn to fit State fmances. There- This may be especially true when First Aid:

>ntanans to express themselves too little. Doctors and Hospital .. . ...•...... • ... .. .......... , , , .... ·?ugh their own means and in Yes, Montana State will have a TOTAL . .... . .. ............. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · .$

612.02 161.00 663.02

" her interest turned to getting / one gives too much and receives Supplies ......... . ................. · • · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · $

nr own :'ay.. . . library. It will be an adequate Conference: a was m this spmt that she building. The original plans for Dues ..................... ... .. ..... . ................. .. $ 40.00 I 1ted several Montanans who its scope and function have been Trip Expense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . .. 525.00

gbt possibly help. It was she, curtailed beyond recognition. Will Trip Expense Estimated . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71.42 , ong others, who offered that it still embody some of the vision TOTAL .......................................... $ 646.42 <ra bit of courage it takes to and courage engendered by Lois M.iscellaneoua: I just a little longer and farther. Payson? Freight .. .. ..... .. ..... , .•... · · • ·. · · · · · · · · · · · • · · · · · · · · · $ .l there are only a handful In her own words, her resigna- Ski Class Transportation ...... · · · , · • · · · · · · • • • • · · · · · · · · · · · $

37.62 161.60 189.12 •ong the students and faculty, tion is "not from Montana State TOTAL . ..•. .. ...... .. · • · • · · · · · · · · · · · · • · · • · · · .. · · $

and new, who have caught a college, but from the System of ~ of th.1.S extra courage, her vis- Higher Education in Montana".

for llfontana State will carry It is a protest against "generally

For those on the campus who " newcomers, Lois Butler Pay-1 is another of the faculty who '.ere<! that extra bit of courage create and nurture a vision.

• also contributed her ideas to ]>Ian for a library and a mu-

always too little and too late". U there are only a handful of Mon­tanans who recognize in this the intended challenge, the resigna­tion of Lois Payson may not be in vain.

The retirement of Leora Hap­ner marks a third gap in the

ranks of those who planned am­bitiously for a library and a mu­seum for Montana State college.

The undercurrent of enthusiasm registered by Miss Hapner was infectious, good to see, and to draw upon in the pinch. In ad4i­tion to serving her department long and well, her service to the entire institution and to all of education in Montana was marked

by that extra bit of courage it takes to do "more than your share".

The State of Montana has far to go to do as well as Leora Hap­ner. There is still a time of grace for Montan.a to do as much. Per­haps her continued presence in Montana will arouse its citizens to fulfill their obligations.

C.F.K.

It's the first of the month -every few days.

The first few days of the month were

once a time of feverish activity for tele­

phone accounting personnel. In that

short period millions of telephone bills

had to be prepared, checked and mailed.

But the Bell System accounting staff,

seeking to level off this work peak, found

a practical solution.

It's called "rotation billing."

Now in our accounting departments, a

new month begins every few days.

.Accounts are divided into six or more

even groups, each with a different bill.

ing date. This spreads the work evenly

and eliminates the old last-minute rush.

This special problem, solved by tele­

phone accountants, is typical of thoso which often confront management in

the many branches of our business. They

present a stimulating challenge to the

young men with initiative and imagina•

tion who will find just such practical

solutions • .• young men who find teleph­

ony an exciting and rewarding career.

There's Opportunity and Adventure in Telephony

BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM

Page 4: ·Renne Will Confer Degrees Ion 184 Seniors; McCain Will Speak

THE IONTANA EXPONENT Wednesday, ;\Jay 21, 19H

136 S d M k aad, D. Jane Gilbert, Robert J. Commencement-- ard L. Fagenstrom, Thomas Wil· \ Harold Stromnes.

'Court. Revives School Spirit; tu ents a e Gilson, Elizabeth L. Haglund, liam Hawksworth, Leroy Elbert Bacteriology: Annabel Jane Cor-

l d T A-Flush Grades Stewart J. Hauptman, Jack w. (Continued from page one) Heerwnl_d,_ Howard Lloyd Huff. nue, Ruth Elaine Dobler, Winifred

S d C t I Healh, Barbara Hitch, A. Calvin Mast.er of Scie nce Degrees ~an, \V1lham Dow Lundberg, ,vii- Lewis Johnson, Frances Gertrud

PAGE FOUR

tu ents ongratu ate on urnou In W1"nter Quarter Hoiland, Howard L. Huffman, Master of Science in Agricul- liam Robert Saubert. . Mary Oswald, Ruth Lydia Pease, Doris Humphrey, Ben F. Hurlbut, tural Economics: Willard Donald Jl!echan>cal Engmeenng: Robert Ann Marie Peoples, Rhoda Hover-

Thursday "as a new beginning for i\l.S.C. Stud,:nts, faculty Thirty-six students made 95 Merle J. Isaac, Patricia J . Janke, Schutz. Gordon Adams, Mark H. Arlllin, son Pollock, Lois Miriam Taylor and all turned out en masse to show a spontaneous rc,n•a l of "hat Charlotte P. Jelinek, Harold J. Master of Science in Agronomy: Robert Anspach, Em,! Matt Binz- Victor Wilkowski. ' e,-eryone has been crying for all year. School spirit! All lul\c 11 a,·erages winter quarter which put Johnson, John L. Johnso n, Robert J esse 111oroni Hodgson, Dale Gard- inn, Herbert J. Brawner, Felix Chemistry: Graeme Levo Bak now and if we can keep il \\C 1..J,ow that our school spirit \I ill be them in the "A-flu sh" class. They G. Jones, Charles G. Jordan, ner Smeltzer. Joseph DeRooy, Leon Elliott Hurtt, Robert Frank Brebrick, Jr., N:;: something to be en,ied by c,ery school in the world._ \Ye are all are: James s. Kane, Raymond H. Ke!- Master of Science in Aanimal Robert Allen Johnson, Conrad A. man Douglas Cascaden WUb a part of a great orgn~iznlion and we all ha,•e a right to s"cll Robert G. Adams, Robert Ans- ley, W;lliam L. Kelly, A. Marie Industry: Ray Roberts Woodward. LaSalle, Gordon Meryle Lindner, Byron Chilcote, Willia,,; Wes!~ our chest and sh ul a bit. E,eryone did a grand job on ··l\J .. da). pnch, Asa ,v. Armstrong, John Lane, Patricia A. Lavery, Renetta l\laster of Science in Eengineer- Rob~rt Wade Massing, Robert Ellis, Raymond LeRoy Erickson,. Congratulations. H. Barton, Roy L. Chapman, Rob- L. Lawrence, Gordon 111. Lindner, ing Physics: Walter. Kerttul~. Lewis Ruggles, Kenneth James Esther Peshkur Horne, Phylr

On tl1e hill painting and rocking the ' ·}I " and on the campus rt A. Craig, Robert W. Crowe, Gordon R. Linscott, Earl R. Lyn- Degree of J\1echan'.cal Engineer: Schmidt, Bob ':"alter Traver. l Green Lefevre, James Robert were the largest groups c,er to turn out. All the houses t~rned out Daniel A. Denison, Thomas A. Do· gnas, Francis E. Marick, James Wesley Warren Smith. I Bachelor of Science m House Hold Roach, Eldon orman Sanbor 100 per cent. There " ere on!) a fe" down al the men 5, quonset· Ian, Charles N. Daugherty, Rich- R. McDonough, Clark B. McKee, Bacteriology: Peter Henry Mat- Arts Victor Ah·in Smith Anna Lee Vo huts who thou~ht the) were too good to do the \\Ork. "e d_1d a ard C. Finley Audrey Frost, Lyn- John E. Mendel, Robert W. Mill- isheck, W. Allan Tschirgi. Applied Art: Elinor Jean Arn- Artsdale \Yillinm Wavne Wood ll good job witl,o~l them: although we would ha,e great ly ap_1necrnte~ don C. Gemmill, Phillip A. llng- er, Eli J\IilodrngoYich, Henry \Y. hemistry: Earl Wilbert 1'1:'rner. eson, llfnrvel Thiel Braziel, Betty Entom'ology: Donaid Ken;eth their help. \i"hat it really all brought out '"" the ".,lltngness lund, Glenn P. Hartman, William Moe, Paul Nelson, F. Lnurcl Pet- Industnal Chemistry: William Judson Gcrmeraad, Joy \'irginia Scharff. and tl1c desire lo cooperate as a group. E,eri bod) "."' .will mg and Hodgson, Mark E. Jennings, Wil- erso n, Leo E. Pfister, Earl L. \Yatson Niven. Reeder. ursing: llarjorie Ellen Brick-earrer to work. There were no dissenting ,o,ces. fins )ear \\8S lis B. Johnston, Henry !IL Kilpat· Rangitsch, Phyllis M. Richards, Zoology: Paul David Buck, Home Economics: Marie An- er, Doris Irene Christopherson ju:t a be~innin~ of the fun and good we, as a group, can get out rick. "\Yilliam A. Richter, Arthur J. Charles William Reiquam. toinette Alexander, Gladys Irene Marie Esther Hinck, Norma Ir;; of collegt Thc":-e were a few "ho held back this )ear because the) R b t lll K I Tl E. Roach, Clyde S. Roark, Magnnr Bachelor of cicncc Degrees Anderson, Dorothy Cantrell Balch, Hoy, Edith Joan Kalal, Bernice

misunderstood and had though they were going lo be sho, ed around. o er ' . oc ,, ,omas Ronning, , ell F. Rooley, Harry General Agriculture: Stanley W. Virginia L . Boid, Betty Bun Eak· Dorothy Larson, Johanne Jesse11

d I Lommasson, John E. Mack, Leila H d S 1 Le Fr This was not the case, however. Everyone was ask.cd to o w mt R. l\foniger, John H. Nelson, D. Ross, Martha 1\1. Saunders, owar · man, e ma e azer, Mary Ol~en, Esther Swingle Pete.rse~

h d "f th 'I I b ed too boss) it was onl)' be- Donald K. Scharff, Harry Schm- Agriculture with Major in Ag- Frances Gray, Jean Marie George, Ahce Rasmussen, Amy El"1zabet,.

they mig t, an 1 e " c u appear ' . Ralph Nichols, Frances G. Os- · Ph"JJ" G q

kn I I d t b do ie and the)' wanted Lhe 10b nutz, Fred A. Schm1·tz, Roger H. ricultural Economics: t ip us- Elaine Johnson Heleen, Rosemary Tunnicliff.

cause they · ew w 1at ,a. O e I wald, Arthur C. Parsons, Jr., Wil- R

f h d

. kl ihl Sherman, William H. Sippel, Louis tavus Haglund , Albert Dean as· Carolyn Kirk, Josephine Lampen, Physical Education: Charles Le-inis e as qmc · Y ns possd e. f I Li .• 11 be too liam F. Polich, Alice Rasmussen, e D J Le,•ern Skaalure Jean L · • Lenh Th

b co tro or 1erc \11 J. Smith, Victor H. Smith, Gilbert muss n, • e • ever,c,. am, eresa land Cascaden, Elaine Guth, Rap•

There must e some egree_ 0 n , . d"ff I Charles R. Rohde, Ervin P. Smith, Ed d D , , h M · " B "d ""

h f d I I d It doe•n l make an1 > er- J. Spesock, Stuart P. Stone, Dale war ean aug an. ane ,.,c r, e, Doris Ruth Mill- ael Eugent Kuga, Gyla Margare•

many c ie s an not _eno~g 1. n rnns. • . . · . . , II Frank A. Stefanich, Orville · ' ence which _organization is in chnrge, but only if the JOb is \\e Thompson, Everett N. ,vaage, C. Swanson, Robert L Sweet, . Agriculture wit? maJor in Ag- er, Gloria Margaret O'Connell, Marrnont, Harvey Hicks Nelson,

d Th b II d

I F!ovd D. Swens~n, Homer B. Ti!· ncul_tural Educnt10n:. Dean _Carl Francis Lorraine Oglesby, Mfiliel Pierce Edward Patterson, Thres

one. e JO was we one. I d f George W. Withrow, William W. ' - D d JI' k Ed J E"l R The Kan(Taroo Court drove home to eac l an e, ery one o us W ton, George Tobias, Joseph J. Ur-1 av1 son, ·~ar wm e_nnmgs, i een equam, Ruth Marion Colleen Ransier, Leonard Jamea what a good ~port really is. Most of the cases were trumped up ood. . ick, Edward Dean Vaughan, Rob- Jan_ies lllnrvm Schultz, Ervin Paul Snapp, Rausie Louise Solberg, Seelinger. affairs, but all the defendants showed exceptional sportsmanship Those from ;.75 to 2.9~ points ert L. Warden, James E. Weaver, Sn11th,_ Charles Maxwel~ Stark. N~na Moore Traver, Mary Edith Pre-Medical Work: Ann Gordon and gave the rest of us, in fu_lure years, . a goal to try and _equal. per credit or 9 __ 5 to 94.9. Ted R. Wilson Frank J. Wood· Agr,culturo with mnJor m Ag- W,Ihck, Martha Jo~phine Wright. Aikins, Kenneth James Baugh, If we can keep that spirit which was evidenced ~h\U"sday \le \1111 Wfoston S. Acton , Raymond land. ' ronomy: John Wesley Gibler, Dave Secretarial Studies: Marybelle Charles Louis Blenkner, Charles really have somethin~ to be proud of. M.S.C. might not ha,·e the Agee, Frnnk T. Andersen, Louis Churchill Kitterman, Charles Ray- Jondrow Budford, Julia Elaine William Reiquam, John Joseph most beautiful grounds, the latest huildin;,5, or .~e most up-lo-date J. Anderson, Joseph B . . Bare, mond Rohde. Burke, Patnc,a Edna Chapman, I Rousseau, Jimmy Lee Traver, Jud-c\U"ricula but they can have the most high spmted student. body George A. Barrow, . Marvin T. AOPi's To At tend Agriculture ";th major in Ani- John Merrell Cornish, Jean Mari- son I\IcCI\U"e Voak. f ollege in the world. Even the poorest man can be iust as Beatty, Charles Bick, Lette J. ma! Industry: Harrison Dawes lyn Emery, Patricia Emerita Three Year Diplomas

;ro'::'l ocf his own possessions ~s the most wealthy man. So be !t Brittan, Caleb Ch~istian, Roy ~- National Conclave Lott, Marion Thomas Hedegaard, Geary, Margaret Veronica Jacobs, Nursing: Jeanne Medford Ahl, that we might not harn e,·erytlimg hut we can be proud of "hat \le Dunn, Arthur \. Dusenbcrri, Wesley Vernon Kegel, Otto Floyd Ruth R. McDonald• Irene Ogle Helen Reed Border, DorothJ do haYe. Hats off to you, students of I.S.C. George A . Engstro1~, Jamee M. Seventeen members of Alpha Pahnish, Joseph John Urick. Sherrow, Frances Adelaide Tes- B\U"ns, Jean Hanson Clary, Fa

Fenske, J ohn B. Fiske, llfar10n Omicron Pi from Montana State Agriculture \\ith major m Dairy low. Couch, Harriet Edwards, Mable

F Se · H F. Fuller, Ir~ne M. ~i?vanini, Har- campus will leave soon after col- Manu!_acturing: _Georg~ Q .. How~. Bachelor of Science in Emerson, Marjorie Frickle, Joyce

Week Observed As 'Operation

ores try fVICe as land J. Goudie, Patr1c1a M. Haeck-, Jege closes in June for their na· i Agr1culture mth maJor m Dairy Division of Science Gee, Ern Ingram, Charlotte

Job For College Men el, James L. Hanson, Parker E. tional conYention which is lo be Production. Charles Fred Bick. Applied Science: Bonnie-Jeanne Knapp, Vivian LeLacheur, Mar · Heikes, Howard J. Holtan, Alice held at the Roanoke Hotel Roan- Agriculture with major in Hor- Mary Blank, Eldon Harold Dahl, Loop, Thelma Lord, JIIary Mather

Naval Reserve' :den between lS and 55 years M. John son, Charles A. Kestle, oke, Virginia. ' ticulture: Ray Franklin Greer, Janice Rae Gaines, Patricia Tocci Boletta Morstad, Geneese OmleT ,

of age are needed by the u. s. Emil 0. Kindschy, r., :Mrs.. Eloise The group will leave Bozeman Gerald Espen Olsen. Hengel, Ra},nond Harrison How- Elizabeth Julian Redfern, Helen!! Forest Service for Blister Rust R. Kirk, Rosemary C. Kirk, by car and will go directly to Ken- I Agriculture with major in Range ard, Jr., Lida Pearl Loffel, Wil- Elizabeth Reikofski, p n tr i c i •

::.Inyor J. H. Healy, in proclaim- W 111

N. k Kl · h ·dt Albe N Management: Burnell W, Brink, liam Woligang Loren Floyd J St k M"ld ed Tu k M"J ing May

18 to

25 as Operation Control work in estern ontana - 1c emsc nn , rt J. • I tucky to i.nspect the national phil- E tt E Sh }l Id Le ., D 11 J , · uc Y, 1 r c er, 1

and Northern Idaho during June, Kraft, Wi11iam W. Lorre11, Wal- anthropic work done by the soror- ,·ere zra uey, aro · me owe , ane Matzke Ronning, Vogel. Naval Reserve, extended congrat- roy Smith

Ulati·ons to the ne"•ly orgaruze· d July, August and September. lace W. !lfcMannis, Marshall J .. ity with the Frontier Nursing Ser- · " k h d d f d · l\:{ p k R b rt J N t M I Bachelor of cience in Engineering

Bozeman chapter of the Reserve " 'or ers are ouse an e m c ~c , o e . er ney, . rs. vice in the Kentucky mountains. h" Ch 1 N 1 Officers of Naval Service. government-operated camps. The Darh~e J. Norwood, Wym_an E. They will visit Washington, D. Arc itecture: ares e son

.A.cling as honorar~ local cha;•. subsistence charge is 60 cent:; yqmst, Otta Floyd Pahmsh, E1- C., Williamsburg nnd other points Dougherty, James Ralph Karlberg, .; ..... J p 1 d E h o Frances. Rae MacGowan.

man, Mayor Healy said, "There per meal. There is no charge for een F . en an ' st er . Peter- o.f interest before going to conven- Chemical Engineering: Robert is no true American who is not quarters. All salaries are subject sen, Frank C. Petr, Alex Pope, hon. After the week at Roanoke, Eugene Baar~on, Howard Ah·erne

Proud of our Navy and its nccomp- to the withholding tax deduction. James P. Purcell, Thomas G. Rob- the group will come home through I B d I I R be. Le C .

The gross salary is $16 .50 per ischon William T Roebuck Don- h h ran e am, 0 1

t e recehus,

which brought us peace ... and month. Pay periods are every two aid R. Samson, James F. Sargent, to be gone about n month. a nee ames ,xon,_ arry . -Jishrnents. It was one of the forces ' . ' t e soul ern states. They expect I W !I J D" H Al

weeks, but checks are not received Marjorie L. Sargent Daniel A. fons Herzel, Paul Ra)mond H1p-

it is one of the forces which guar- until from two to three weeks fol- Schlichtig, Kenneth j_ Schmidt, _Those who expect -r to make the pely, Emil Oscar Kindschy, Jr., antees us peace-not only for our lowing the end of pay periods. James M. Schultz, Ray F. Seder- trip. are: Helen "olf, . chapter Daniel Ohren Popovac. own country but for the world a,; Upon completion of one month of h I L d J S r J president, Blanche Franklin, Mary I Ch;! Engineering: Charles )lel-a whole. This is something which O m, eonar · ee inger, ames Lou Pasha Lila Swan Julia Sam D h F k • service, annual leave with pay is F. Vandenburg, Rulh \Voodruff, . ' . ~ ' . p- son oug erty, ran \\ endlin none of us should forget. earned at the rate of two days Stanley y h son, J\JarJorie Roberts , Geraldme Heck, Jr., DaYid Wesley JllcCul-

Operations Naval Reserve is in- f . • ec a Fitzgerald, Elaine Guth, Phyllis Iough, Thomas Murdock )lcKen-tended to better acquaint the pub· or each month of service, plus Those from 2-5 to 2.75 points Todd, Clara J\lae Quinnell, Marion zie, Gerald Eugene Oman, Robert

an additional half day when the d"t 90 t n? 5 lie with the peacetime aims of the service aggregates three months. per ere 1 or o "'-· : Amos and ~rs. Judy Hauseman, William Tietjen, Eugene Richard

~::~ :rn!et~ra~~r:e~h!b~a,.';,';1~!: The work is forty hours, eight A1::r~o~· ~:~;:0\/en::~~r~· chapter adviser. Wilde, Harry Wilkins, Jr.

hours a day, Monday thru Friday. • ' · - ' Electrical EngM1eering: Kenneth sen·e. Applicants must be American Jack E. Bailey, Theodore E. Bair, F.\:-.rG DUKE .\TTENDS Raymond Brown, Theodore Vincent

The first local e,·ent prior to citizens and capable of walking Donald E. Baldridge, John L. Bas- NATIO, AL CONVE..'iTIO. Crater, Kenneth Joseph Frazer. the "Operations" was the forma- and working eight hours a day in kett, Donald P. Bauer, Mrs. Mar- Maurice Eugene Guay, John \Yil-tion of a Bozeman chapter May k t . t p jorie Beckman, ~lildred JII. Bet- Cal Hoiland, Duke of Fang chap- Jiam Heidt, Clyde Berry Hinton, 14. At that time twenty-four re- r oe _Y, moun ai?~us coun ry. ro- tie, John K. Beumee, L. Pauline ter, 0 rd er of Intercollegiate Freder,·ck Cl,.fford Kr"ings, Henry

. • . motions to positions of more re-serve officers of the Na,-y, ~arme I sponsibility and higher salary Blue, Burnell W. Brink, Georgiana Knights, spent May 1, '.! and 3 in Winter Lydick, James Robert J\1c-l Cor~s, and the Coas.t Guard_ or- rate is possible if qualifications Bruce, Glen S. Buck, Elmer D. ::\loscow, Idaho, at. the Twenty- Donough, Dan Joseph O'Brien, Ar-

1

gamz;dd )~any ;\ th~:• off1becers are demonstrated and vacancies Butler, Ellis J. Callnntine, Sarah Fourth Annual ConYention. He thur Carroll Parsons, Jr., Richard are s u ens an acu y mem rs occur. Ca,ender, Patricia E. Chapmnn,I represented :\lontnna State college Harry Prescott, Donald Robert of the college. For application forms and fur- Gerald Clary, Theodore \'. Crater, at the first full-scale national Samson, Rudolph Charles Jay

An enlistment table will be set ther details, contact the Student\ Clifford C. Craw, Mrs. Jean W.1

meeting since before the war. Schneider, Thomas Leroy ween-up on the campus in conjunction "\Ye If are office or call at the For- Crecelius, ~lrs. Cini a E. Decgan, The Order of Interco11eginte ey, Paul Eugene Uhlrich. with the downtown enlistment est Service office in the post of- Felix J. DeRooy, John B. Deveney, Knights is composed of nineteen Physics· Frank Le\\b ::\lcCraC'k-group. Clyde Carpenter and Max Eugene C Doll John C Don h t f th · f1ce building in Bozeman. · • · o-1 <: ap ers on mo~t o c 1mport.:.mt in, Robert James ~crtney, \\',.alter Worthington will be actively en- hoe, Earle ~!. Douglas, Waller L. campuses in the Northwest. Al· Mathew Parock. gaged in assisting the enlistment Haroltl ::\lurdock "i1l be. in the

1 ~unn, Frcde1kk )I. Edson, Gran- though its beginnings can be Industrial Engi1fcering: Robert

officer. _Other. members of the :11:ontana Power Co. offices to I nlle Edgmond, Raymond L. Er- traced back to the Unh·ersily of Arnold Balch Bruce LloYd Beatt. 01;gamzal1on :nil be on hand to, giYe any informal ion that pros.- ickson, Robert N. Em in, Donald Washington in 1919, Fangs chap- Chest<er Log~n Belde,;, Elm~; give mf_ormatJon. A 1:3-ble will be I pective members might hke to A. Fisk, G~raldine Fitzgerald, Jan- ter is one of the charter units in I Denn Butler, Leslie \Vnrren Cow­set up m the post office and Mr. know. 1 ice R. Game~, Betty J. Germer- the organization. an, Robert James Dyer, Jr., Rich-

BoaPd of Publications .Appoints Exponent and Montana

JOHN R. THOMPSON John R. Thompson, more gen­

eraUy called "Bob", has been r e­appointed business manager of tho 1948 MONTANAN, Bob took over the job as business man­ager of the 1947 MONTANAN last March when Don Stanfield went hack to the .lllarine Corps.

Previous to this time Bob act· ed :9 assistant busi!l.e68 manag­er m 1942 and again in 1947.

, I

George \Vatson a nd J im

Drummond will be co-ed itors of

the MONTANAN for the 1947-

1948 school year . Geor ge was on

the st.arr or the Glasgow High school "Scotty" ( yearbook) , and

also a member of the hi gh school newspaper staff in Glas­gow. He will be a sophomore

dur ing his t~rm -Of of fice.

J im was an active me mber of

lhe Montana n staff when he at­

tended M.S.C. before the war .

Both he aad George worked on

this yea r 's Montanan. J im will

g radu ate £all qu arter next year , a nd George will become editor­in-chie f at that ti me.

Bob Hende rson ~·as reap·

pointed business manager for

t he J\IONTA, A E."\'.PONENT

for the year 1947-48. Bob is n

j unior I . E. major nnd has WOrk­

ed on the EX PON&'i T as bus i·

nese manager flor lhis y ast year.

I wish to extend my congratulations and the b t of luck lo the future "chiefs" of tl,e EXPON­El\T and MONT ANAN.

We have had a good year with many interesting and news-,orthy actid ties on the cnmpu• In spite of the many "ruts in the road" "hen publishing a school paper, we of the Exponent slafr' hn,e enjoyed working togetl1er to put college life at 111. .C. into print.

Orchids to my staff for tl1e fine job they hn,·e done, and thanks lo the administration for their cooperation. Ru tl1 D obler.

was a ppointed by the Board of Publications to be the editor of the MONTANA EXPONENT fo r the 1947-4 8 school year. Ha nk has worked on the Expon­ent for three year s. He was

por ts Editor h is sophomore and junior years . Hank will be a senior pre-med major durin g h is term of office.

- .,v.:>ffl'-~-----=-r- - ~;fl ~9g~pJ~~5'~ s~ i,er/ee e61'

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l\lodern ..• Lightweight and Seniceahle

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Sale Price $2 69*

Carry it "~th ease! ... this capacious, 21-inch case (covered with long-W€aring canoos) bolds your clothes neatly. In brown tweed effect, contrasting end trim ... strong leather handle.

For Short Trips

ZIP BAG Ou r Regular Low Price $1.29*

~~:e 99c• An ideal traveling com­panion , .. for overnight­or the weekend. Heavy nau­gahyde with leather tab, • , • rigid bottom with metal knobs assures long wear. JS.inch.

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Chomo It in 18- or 21-inch ol.w •.. whichever 1uita yo• ne.lo, E asy-to-clfflll fabrico id cooering ii made for laMd wear. Rayon lining •• • top vain leather handle.

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G""'"~ The Friendly Stora

Page 5: ·Renne Will Confer Degrees Ion 184 Seniors; McCain Will Speak

~,esday, May 21, 1947 MONTANA EXPONENT PAGE FIVE

88ies Throw Rodeo - - - - En8ineers Uninspired vents to Take Place at the City , r 'M' Shines Bright -airl3rounds on Saturday May 24 ow college boys and girls haver Campus Is Clean

led up for steer riding, horse /

•. king, calf roping, anti wild nf~am [ T k nr

mdos~~M:a~y -~

4

t a~t~;

2

dpf!_;ms~_h:11;~~:~ f I ura l rac Fortune favored us with a day • (12) And last of all an orchid

,. of sunshine and fair weather- to all of us. The spirit was good

M t t b M 23 neither too hot nor too cold. The and becau se of that everybody

:1nefer:p:Pedi;:egrrs,eden,paGrlt1e·ncdip1·vaen,'.s aJ~,me: ee O e a y ~~~:rz;:p;::ts ,::~n::::eurl t~:~ '~~: !;:~~n~~:~1:,~er;.1;x;d "M" day expected. Everyone seemed will­

~. Choteau; Ralph Nichols, All organizations are invited to in the interest of the contestants. ing to lend a helping hand. The ;:1tj J im McGowan, Bou.Ider; participate in an intramural track ~o individual may enter more "M" was put into better condi­:-key Ashby, .Missoula; Bob meet to be held this coming week- than three final events, however tion than it has been in f or many er, Belgrade; Bill Cornelius, end, Friday, May 23, and Satur- failure to qualify on Friday in years. The campus is cleaner now re; Dale Davis, Bozeman. day, May 24. Preliminary time than we have ever seen it. The ild cow milking: trials in the more popular e,•ents the preliminaries in no way hamp- flagpole lunch was delicious and ?ne Pederson, GJenaive; John will be held Friday as well as the ers a man from participating in enjoyable.

·ng, Kirby; Jim Rose, Choteau; finals in the discus and javelin three other events on Saturday af- The Kangaroo Court provided h Nichols, Grant; Jim Mc- field events. All other finals will ternoon. enter tainment, joviality, and, for

*'8n, Boulder; Sharkey Ashby, be held on Saturday. The sprint medley to run at 2 some, dampness! Observations oula; Glenn Said, Great Falls; Entrants for the 100 yd. dash, p. m. on Saturday will be a half here and there showed that by far Miller, Belgrade; Bill Cor- 440 yd. dash, 120 yd. high hurdles, mile in length anti consists of the vast majority of M.S.C. stu­

•"• Havre; Dale Davis, Boze- 220 yd. dash, the javelin, and the two UO yd. dashes, one 220 yd. dents are really 0. K. However, ; Ted Svaven, Hardin; Al discus should register before to- dash and one 440 yd. dash. there are a few otbers-an, Bozeman; Fred Mitchell, morrow evening at 5 with Coach Four places will be scored in May we scatter a few orchids tonda; Mel Johnson, Boulder. Flieger in the gym. These events this meet, and the scoring will and onions? .ddle Bronc Riding: will be run Friday starting at 5 run 5 points for a first, 4 points (1) First of all a luscious or­hn Young, Kirby; Jack Hoov- p. m. for a second, 2 points for a third, chid to the enti~·e freshman and

•Belt; Mac McRae, Forsythe; On Saturday afternoon at 2, the and 1 point for a fourth place. sophomore classes for the wonder-Porch, Florence; Red Green- finals in the following events are The matter of shoes has been left ful representation at the "M". ' Bozeman; Jim Ro5e, Cho- to be run off: to the contestants. Spikes may be (2) An orchid to all of those ; Jack Galt, Great Falls; Ed Sprint medley, one mile run, worn, but they must be provided men who with so little asking ms, Rosebud; Swede Wesen, 440 yd. dash, 100 yd. dash, 880 for by the individual. managed to carry a can of water gow; Curt Mavity, Fairview; yd. relay, 120 yd. high hurdles, Results in this meet may well or a sack of lime up "the long, •ngstrom, Missoula; Bud Mar- 880 yd. run, 440 yd. relay, 220 yd. indicate the material available for long trail" to the M.

,Peerless; Al Cowan, Bozeman. dash, 220 yd. low hurdles, mile re- a contemplated MSC inter-colleg- (3) An onion to a few reckless .reback Bronc Riding; lay, pole vault, shot put, high iate cinder squad in the 1947-48 ones who wasted and spilled water mk Esp, Lodge Grass; John jump, and broad jump. season. after it had been packed to the 1g, Kirby; Jack Hoover, Belt; Several regulations have been j No cross country event has been top. McRae, Forsythe; Gordy Bris- set up by the Athletic department , scheduled thus far for the meet. (4) An orchid to all the leaders Forsythe; Jerry Hould, Mal- -the ones who did more than

lulph Nichols, Grant; Jim Mc- Softball Ti.tie No Conference their share and encouraged others .Jall, Boulder; Barney Larson, by their exaw.ple. ?Cler; Wes Johnson, Boulder; (h • B k tb ll (5) An onion to the ones who

Galt, Great Falls; Stuart R st·11 0 ange ID as e a let rocks start rolling down the -.,vtman, Polson; Bill Corne!- ace I n

JHavre; Bud Martin, Peerless; Recently a nation-wide news hill, even if it wasn't on purpose. b II \ syndicate d · t ·b ted th st Rolling rocks are dangerous and

t Davis, Bozeman; Bob Storey, Blue league soft a became :'\ is n u . . e. ory carelessness could cause a serious a?ron; Swede Wesen, Glasgow; channelized this last week ,vith . that .1.S.C. had Jomed 1n the . . . . . I formation of a new athletic con- injury.

Anderson, Fort Benton. the Sigma Chts wining their ference. This story is unfounded. (6) An orchid to the several

Fliers Take to Air As Weather Breaks

\Vith a break in the weather, member s of the Flying Co-op have been flocking to Gallatin fie ld to get in their flying time. Some of them are work ing for their pri­vate licenses, some are pre-solo students, theTe are a large num­ber of veteran combat pilots. There has been much enthusiasm shov,;n towards the Co-op and by next fall it should be the largest organization on the hill.

Last week-end the Flying Co-op had a picnic out on Jack-Rabbit lane. It was a big success. Need­less to say, there wasn't much flying the following day.

The air show which was planned for this spring has been postpon­ed until next fall. With the in· creased amount of flying time the members will get this summer, the show should really be a thriller next fall.

Leonard Johnson made his first supervised solo flight Thursday. He could have walked away from any of his landings, so it was o. k. There will be three more stu­dents to solo this spring and two get their private licenses. Hurry boys, you have only two weeks left!

Anyone wanting information re­garding the Flyin Co-op can con· tact Buck Moore at the Bozeman ,er Riding= r h h · · I

John ourt straig t victory m down- Apparently the erroneous con- J Spurs who pack_ ed boxes of dough·

nk Esp, Lodge Grass; . h , 0

Th I . ts th h II y t I Aviation Service at Belgrade, or g, Kirby; Mac McRae, For- rng t e SAE s 14- . . . e or.ly op- clus10ns were arrived a~ because nu up e 1 · ou were ru Y 4 B St., Bozeman, in the eve-; Ralph Nichols, Grant; Jim ponent apparently stil l m the race of a meetmg our athlet1c depart- the "Spurs of the Moment". ning.

I ,wan, Boulder; Bud Martin,' for the honors are the Kappa ment attended at Spokane. This (7) An orchid to those who did The organization will be in full Sigs with four wms and a single meeting was not an endeavor to the dirty job of handling the lime

ess; Vern Keller, Fishtail; d f t h d d h 1

brooms and mops. swing next fall, so if you want to torey, Cameron. e ea an e t em ast \\eek by promote a new league, but only to (8) An onion to the many up- fly don't fail to take advantage g· Is C tting Ho Co u, t a strengthened Pi Kap team that facilitate scheduling for the five of the low rates and at the same

A via ti on Needs Engineers

I i'Il ocean liners, railroads and au­tomobiles.

The book deals extensively with the fundamental prlnctples, <:onstruetion, operation, testing

:\"ew York- "A large reserve and maintenance of the engi'Des. of young engi•neers given th e A complete analysts ls ma.de ot proper "k'now-bow·• is t>T'iceless a1J ~no1,1,,'ll jet-,prapelled planes insurance against our country -and engines today in op,eration ot" becoming a second-rate power in projected in the United States aviation," Gen. Carl A. Spaatz. j and Brritain. German jet fighter'3 Commandi•ng General , U. S. A.nny \ and bombers are also described in Air Forces declared here in a 1detail. All are illustrated by pho­preface to the new, enlaTged tographs and drawings. fourth edition of "Gas Turbines and Jet Propulsion for Aircraft," by G. Goef[ry Smith, M.B.E., in­ternationally known British avi­ation authority, just published by Aircraft Books, Inc., N.Y.C. (CLoth cover: $5.)

i'l'he Britis,h authority gives de­tailed specifications, perform­ance, characteTistics and other da(a where available. He sb.ows bow speed, rate-of-climb, carry .. ing capacity, and range have im­proved beyond reeogn.ition in re-

"We look to the schools and cent years. universities to provide ·basic The volllllle contains the firs t knowledge to embryo engineers complete review ot American, and technicians, botlh in civilian !British and German gas turbines, OPganizations arad in the Army fuJly jllustr'ated with detailed Air Forces,'' he said. prawings.

"We are also depending on Students and engineers Will be civilian industry to train quali- 'especially interested in Smith's. fied technicans to provide us witb chaJPter on tailless aircraft and the newest and most powerful tihe flying wing .. . future trends aircraft ~ssible." and possibilities. Other aspects of

It is the only book ID the world the 'Dew aviation devetcu>ment on the most ilniportant wartime which are inc.1uded for the first aviation development. time in the new volume are : Met ..

The volume has been adopt- allurgy, problems associated w!tlI ed as a text by the A~my Air 'turbine discs and blades, testing !Forces and the Navy's Bureau of and maintenance, fuel equipment .Aeronautics, and 1by many col- and control, turbi'De components, leges, universities and technical radial and axial compressors, and i'Dstitutions, incl,uding M,tnneso- thrust performance. ta, Stanford, Kansas, Delaware Quotations fr.om papers deuv .. and others. It is also a designat- ered r ecently by aeronautical ed 1.extbook at Westinghouse's and turbine engineers are f reely Gas Tuy,bine Division and other cited, so that the reader will Jiave clvilian Q>lants engaged fo Jfet a broad survey of the trend of work.. present thought and progress

Tbe inbroductian is by Mr. <boob in the United States and Charles E. Wilson, prooident. Britain. General Electric company; the --------fo1·eword by Sir Geoffrey de Hav- Sammy Kaye and his orchestra ill an d, C.B.E., F.R.Ae.S., famed recently broke the house record jet plane designer. The present at the Capitol in WasMngton, D, stage of development and future C. prospects of gas t.urbi'lles are dis-cussed by Air Commodore Frank Whittle, C.B.E., whose basic pat­ents are embodied in many ty·pes of turbines in use today.

The new edition has been en~

GALLATIN TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK

w ir u rse n 8 took the measure of victory 6-3 schools involved, Eastern Wash- perclassmen and faculty members arlys Moecker, Nashua; El- in a tight pitcher's duel. ThP Sie- ington college, Gonzaga college, who were too busy elsewhere; but Clausen, Roundup; Blanche ch· K s· ·11 an orchid to those who did a good

time belong to a fine organization. 1

larged from 128 to 264 pages.

Photographs, d raw i n gs a•nd Bozeman, Montana

.l)ls, Grant; Rosemary Perkins, ma i- appa igma ~:.M~ w1 Idaho state ·(PocatelloL Montana i·ob of clean,·ng up the campus. -.i be the deciding contest vf the cir- university and Montana state. What's New gravhs ha,·e been increased to

200, and the volume ,has been an, Wyo.; Barbara Bodan, cuit if the latter drops the ron- Each of these schools will remain (9) An orchid to evei·y' s ingle nan; Garnet Kotkin, Fort test. If the Kappa Sigs win from and compete in their individual one of those condemned by the

Theo Tygum, Ennis; Lila the Sigma Chis, the league prob- conferences. Kangaroo Court. Your sportsman-Bea~. August~. p d ably wi1l ";nd up in a rie. Besides the games listed below, ship was wonderful. ~a ,rector, ene e ersen, Gold league results have faulter- Bobcat quintets will clash with (lO) An onion to the girls who ve. ed since the ••ores were- not of- Rocky Mountain conference com- had on makeup. k-up man-Hup Davis, Boze- ..,..,.

Senator (Kenny Delmar) Clag· extended from 15 to 21, chapters. horn recently presented to Spike It contains an exhaustive study Jones a plaque awarded to Jones of gas tutTbines as applied to air­by the National Laugh Week · craft, and broaches possible use Foundation for being "The man who has contributed the most to ficially reported. The only two petition and another holiday sched- (11) An orchid to the M-club,

ing judges: Homer Fisher, 't..eams that probably are eJimjnat- ule is anticipated with schools of who, with very few exceptions, an; Bob Chambers, Seattle. ed from a chance at the tit!e are Utah, North Dakota, Colorado, used authority where it was need-

the SA.E's with three losses and South Dakota, and Minnesota. ed and in a very fair manner.

the laughs of the nation in 1946." Johnny Mercer will substitute

for Jack Benny this summer.

p r tanians · iate Five

day morning, May 18, the .. Spartanians initiated t he

new members who were tap­nn Honor's Day. President,

Marmont was in charge of ormal services in the faculty a of the Student Union.

c 110ediately after the initiation , roup went to the Baxter for

ffle breakfast. Guests for casion were Miss Hasaeus, immel, Miss Clydesdale and

,Davidson. new Spartanian actives are

rt Buckhouse, Francis Thom­I ,loise Vanden Beisen, Zoe

ns and Charlotte Winkelman .

· I aband: " Well, my dear, carried you safely over all

ough places of life, haven't

'e: "Yes, and I don't think toissed any of them."

I,~=====:

Super reamed · e Cream

the Associated Independents with Partial schedule: ,===========================, two losses. Other teams appar- Dec. 19-20, E. W. C., Bozeman. ently still in the running with the Jan. 9-10, Gonzaga, Bozeman reports recorded are the Gallop- Jan. 23-24, Idaho state, Pocatello ing Goons, M-Club, and Butte Jan. 30-31, Montana U. Bozeman Rats No. 2 with the Coops and Feb. 6-7, Gonzaga, Spokane Sigma Chis close behind the un- Feb. 9-10, E. W. C., Cheney defeated three with only one Joss Feb. 20-21, Idaho state, Bozeman each. Feb. 27-28, Mont. U., Missoula

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Richardson's Homemade Candies Fountai:n uurrwh

SHOWING AT THE THEATRES JOYCE T HEATRE

22-27-"THE MIGHTY McGURK"' with Wallace Beery and Ed­ward Arnold.

ELLEN THEATRE 22 • 24 - "HOMESTRETCH" (Color ) wit h Corne! Wilde and Maureen O'Hara. 25-27- "THE LATE GEORGE APLE Y" wi t h Rona ld Colema n and Peggy Cummings. 28·31 - "CHEYENNE" with Dennis Mor gan a nd Jane Wy-man.

RIAL TO THEATRE 22 . 24 ~ "CODE OF· THE WEST" with James Warren & Deborah Alden, also . "A VAL­ANCHE" with Bruce Cabot & Roscoe Karns 25-27 - "SWEETHEART OF SIGMA CHI" with Elyse Knox & P hil Reagan, also "THE BIG FIX" wit h Robert H enry and Ralph Lewis.

ATTENTION STUDENTS! If activity ticket, are pre,ented al an.y of the box offices for ,tu. dent rates by an.yone other than the owner, those cards will be voided for theatre u.se.

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FAIRGROUNDS ADMISSION 60c 2:00 O 'CLOCK SATURDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 24

Page 6: ·Renne Will Confer Degrees Ion 184 Seniors; McCain Will Speak

PAGE SIX THE MO TANA EXPONENT

~~'J::~~~~~~g~~~;·,~;.:; ~lo~oJ~ ~~:Yb:~: But 1~:!~:t;:~:.'."" ful )'other's Dav. Appro.ximately that the weaker sex often has ~ By l'aul l{'tpp"IY ing their work in Agricultural

... u - b bit of grey matter " • campus down by the barracks. Education this June ha,·e ac cp-150 mothers, fathers, and mem ers 'Ti ed th .t J . e Gnineb The writer, or rat.her, perpetra- (Don't spread thi!=. around, but a ted pos·1t·1ons as vocational a<f'ricul-were guests at dinner. Following 5 _ rumor. 8 ant~ ,•- b the dinner

8 short musical pro- and h.ay Fox are pl~nmng a 1 tor, of lmpcrtinax, went through captain was seen picking up a bit ture instructors in Mont.anu high

gram was presented by the glee I

ta! step-PanHcl to111ght. an unnerving experience Inst. week. of tra"sh.) Girls were wielding schools, according to Profe::;sor club and the SAE quartet under I Mothers attending the Mother':. One of his friends picked up the shovels, the M-club wn:s wielding R.H. Palmer, head of the depart-the direclion of Pete Roberts. Day luncheon at the Alpha Gan~- EXPONENT, said "\Vher~ is that authority, and the faculty was ment.

Jack Galt and Bob Henderson ma Delta hou_s.c were: Mrs. J. ~ · Dean Davidson has signed up \\ F M W guff llippely writes?'' found it wielding \•arious farming tools, D t d J L N d \

were re-elected as pre:5-ident and Holm_. Mrs. m. raye~, .i: ;·s. · 1 l kl h k E k' . 1 ted back- at en on an ames . or en vice president at the recent ig F .. " eed~11nn, 1\Jrs. F. . \\ ulde1~, snugged up next to a us ma er, from c s 0\

0

erst1mu a at Sidnc}•, both beginning July Al h election The following new Mr::;. Tribble, Jrs. · A. Trac),

1

and proceeded to read the column scratche1· t.o Dr. Pepper's com-I 1st on 12 months contracts. Max ofiicers wer~ chosen: Sid Eng- Mrs. J. Tabor, 1\f:s· Rey110lds, Mrs. nloud to Impertinax himself and binntion rake and leaning post. Stark will continue to teach at St. I strom, i·ecorder; Bill Bowden, / i\Iilchell, Mrs. Killeen, Mrs. 0 . ~- assembled guests. Roll c_all .was taken, too, so non- Ignatius, _having completed the fi- The most u seful addilion to chronicler; Ed Hardy, herald; and Hammerstrom, l\lrs. M. E. Holh-

1 t' t th t ·t was pnrtictpat111g students are now on nal requirements for the degree

1

,11mmer wardrobe this >'Ur "": Earl Johnson, assistant treasurer. daf, J.frs. Haeckel, 1\lrs. Culbert- . n~~cr/nar:"~e~~rm:tes.a F~rthcr- Vic Smi\h:s li_st. It is hope<! that dur.ing the curre~t year. Ervin your romper ,ulL One shown

Congratulations to Jack Grif- son and Mrs. Bely. ~l g st. Y h f h' b d non-paruc1pnt1ng faculty wtll be Smith has been m charge of the u pictured Ln the Aprll lss fitts who receh·ed the annual SAE I ~lrs. ,vmiam. Ragen, )!rs. Bob l n~ore, he says,. a not.~ ,?c 15

u .-\ invited to make a close-up study ,·ocational agriculture department JunJor ea2.aar II mad, tn award for outstanding freshman! Kapinos, Mr. a~,d Mrs. Charl~s dles greeted hnn wit I l)mmuni- of the gold-fish and marine flora at Gallatin ounty High school (Teen and while S\rtpes

The Sig Alph :seniors Ii,·ing in Lane, Marge \V1eglandn. and Loi~ 1

Don Dira purlieip~itcs in quo from Gloccamorra. Shorts at the bottom of the fish pond . 1 this rear. while completing his alrapless. A little drawstrln1 the house received a good dousing Steere were weekend guc~~s a. "i\l"' day clean-up by repair- story! . Anybod.y thnt would. put i£,~ryone else worked, more or college program. Mark Jennings It fit to perfection. Not shoW11

at 5:80 ~t. m. on Honors Day Dan I the Alpha Gam h_?use. Joe J,1rsch- ing: a fence around the trailer. stuff like thut rn the paper \\O~ld less, including an eager group who I and James Schultz have each re- malchtnu full skirt to slip on

II d B K Beers and at i'\Irs. Dira superviSC'S. suck egg ." Therefore, the rec1p- I I t· the . d ff f 1 ~f the suit to convert U lnto a.a

O"Bric,n, Ken Frazer, Maurice er ca e on . · , - . f II th· abuse has sworn were specu ~ 1_ng among m- ce1,·e _o ers rom se,·era . on- lent •u» dress. Guay, and \\'alt Pnrock were rout- tended the Alpha Gamma Delta ,ent O a ts

1 k I selves on f1llmg up that nasty tana high schools, but have not ------------Ill

ed out of bed tied to. h·ee, and sprmg party. . Palmer w1·11 V1"s1"t off columns. for .•t east a ,fvee • hole by Montana Hall. yet s igned contracts. Someone once asked the I

• O h.d t th h s n / and 1s obeying 111s.truct.1ons rom , d p . f 1 thoroughly drenched with the lawn I re i s o e. unsung eroe . i • • the Almighty lier Highness, the Anyway, the camphus . reco, e.re I The sho1 tage of qua lifted agn- nnce o ",.a es, ""Wbat is hose. Then they were bundled up the ma~y orgamzed h_ouses \\ ~o I Br1t1sh And French I Junior Ptom 'Queen, to write a !ea- fr?m the shock of avrng _some- culturnl instructors has resulted idea of civilization?"

and treated to a waiting break- have fa1thfull_y subnnt~e~ ne,n . . .

1 N th I thrng conslruct1ve done to it for in ,·ery favorable salary offer, "It's a good idea," repli

I k th t an" LJ ture on the campus c eanup. o - . . t . , fast. I cac '. \\CC. WI OU recemng ·' n1vers1t1es I b t h M the f1r,;t tnne m ump een ,ears. according to Professor Palmer. prince. " omebody ought to

Congratulations to the new ac-. credit. . I mg "ns menttonel a ou t e ' and is now picked cleaner than a I it." tives of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Joe Ruth Dobler,_ conYentently ab- Professor R H Palmer head I and Queenie is off on ha banhd tbour, I censored plav. Henceforth, anyone Johnny Long will play the grad-

f th L " C t re · · ' so suffice 1t to sny t at t e 1g- · . b h · d · Hodson and Paul Hartsell. sent rom e .r..nngaroo our , . - of the Department of A.gricult.ur- h . ·ld . caught throwmg utts onto t e uation ance at the Umted States Latest name reported to Q\·er 200 parents and friend~ nt- ceived her sentence, a col~ <l_llll~k al Education leaves early m June ge.st block letter m t e 'k'?

1 ie-

1 grass \\ill be forced to dig a 6x6x6\ :\1ilitary Academy, West Point, on sidering a disc jockey show i

, D · t the GannnA. Phi picmc ' J ce1ved a high-class re-roe tng anc 1 1 f t th t . d b ·t J 1 ,,~·,-tended the annual Mothers ay sw11n, a f~r Europe where he will s~.n I whitewash 'ob b the entire soph- 10 c, ec ' n is, an ury I • une . ' nlvcman... Tea at the Alpha Omicron Pi last weekend. his three months leave at British j omore a nJd f~eshman classes. house. President Helen ,volf met and French universiti~s. Hordes of same, transported to

the guests at the door and Ruth What's New). ). . Professor Palmer Will take. part I 1Iount Bald)' b)' vehicles of all :McDonald poured. 11n seve. ral conferenc~s on lugher sizes and descriptions, nearly

Plans are under way for the d t t th I t t t P h I j R I e ~ca ion 8 e ns 1.u e .~ye O - broke their backs carrying water, AOPi spring formal to be held at Br Pat a mmond ogte at the Sorbonne m Pans, and lime and themseh·es to the top, the Armory on May 24th. Chnper- After a date April 16 at the, U. spend some time at the Univer- and now the 1\1 does everything ones will be Mr. and Mrs. Van of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, Stan sities of Oxford and London be- but glow in the dark. Winkle and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Kenton told his band he couldn"t fore he returns in early Septem-Kneeland. continue. He had previously ig- ber to resume his duties here.

Down on the campus, while all this was going on, the poor, old decrepit juniors and seniors were forced by an eager M-club to do a number-one policing job on the area. Shrubs were trimmed and spaded around, trash raked and

A luncheon was given at the nored doctor's waTning to quit or AOPi house on unday, honoring face prospects of a complete ner­brides-to-be Jane Gilbert, Eileen vous breakdown. Members of the Reiquam and Miggie Linfield. The' band scattered eYery way with guests included :l!rs. Harris and plans to join other big bands or Dovie Hughes from the Kappa I form small groups. Despite the Delta house. usual rumors the band broke up

D. C. Drake, National Presi- entirely ~cause of the leader's dent of Alpha Gamma Rho, was health, not because of financial a guest of Alpha Delta chapter troubles. Most of I,enton".s side­on )fay 12th. 1.lr. Drake is on a men are sure the band will be re­sixteen-day swing of the western formed sometime before their Pal­chapters of Alpha Gamma Rho. ladium date in September. Capitol

The AGR spring party at the Records plans to release some of Nine Quarter-Circle ranch wa~ re- the newest Kenton discs and in ported a roaring success.

1 this way keep the Kenton name

John R. Thompson and Dale , alive. ~ynch a.re running stiff. competi-J The Tex 1:leneke and Frankie tton for Eleanor by leavmg town Carle orks will share the Chester-

Forensic Honorary To Be Reinstated

Pi Kappa Delta, national for- collCcted, the entire campus dive­ensic honorary, which has been in-, bombed for. butts a~d other ca)-.t­acti\'e on the campus since the offs of n stnful society. E,·en the war, will be reinstated again. army was out cleaning up it

Seven men, Bill Campbell, John \\"ebster, Bill Reid, James Van I Denberg. Morry lr,·ine, Charle•::. Dougherty, and Maynard Mount­joy were designated by the debate coach and the commissioner of forensics as worthy of member­ship. In a meeting held last week these men elected officers and

DIAMONDS WATCHES

and other .JEWELRY

so frequently. field summer spot, replacing the made arrangements for application for

Congratulations to Pi Phi Jean regular stars Perry Como and Jo for a charter. Him and Her Noremburg and Sigma Chi Joe Stafford and the Lloyd Shaffer Heald! Jean is now wearing the band. SUCCESSFUL BRIDGE: The pia11h-t's ,Yhite Cross. The Harry James band is back triumph of mind o,·er chatter.

Mothers and sisters were enter- in the business again with a ser­tained at a formal dinner in the ies of one night appearances in Pi Kap chapter house on )!other's Tex.as and eastern engagements. Da,-. James and his horn are expected

Congratulation, to Allen Clark back in Hollywood in August. and George Risdal, new pledges Th e R. C. A. Victor release, of Pi Kappa Alpha. "Blues of the Record Man," by

The Pi Kaps regret losing a Tex Beneke with the ~filler band good pr<·sident and swell fellow- is a salute to the disc jockeys. The Ken Humphreys who left school ,·ocalizing of Beneke and the Mel­lo work at an air field outside lo Larks along with the identify­Salt Lake City. ing themes of top bands such as

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Cigars were passed at lite Pi T. D., Charlie Spi,·ak, Duke Ell­Kap house by Buell Burch who ington, and Sammy Kaye make recently became a proud poppa. this disc add up to fine listening.

Sonny Hanson was "all wd·1 ;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~=============:

and PRESSING

SEND YOUR CLOTHES TO again on "~I" Day. While not a violator at the Kangaroo Court, Sonny was physically encouraged to take a dip in a creek near the\ "M", by ten erstwhile "lady" members of the student body.

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Congratulations to Frankie Mc- \

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