12
Upper left, the South Hall Girls exhibit their prize-winning sentiment toward the Washington Huskies. . .. Center, the students stand as the Cougar fight song is played.... Upper right, another Homecoming sign, the first prize exhibit of the AGD's.... Center left, the WSC cheering section greets the Idaho Vandals.... Center, the Delta Delta Delta drummers per- form for the huge Homecoming crowd. .. . Center right, Butch II's third birthday is heralded by the card section. . . . Lower left, the Idaho students gather at the gates.•.. Lower center, ATO's winning Homecoming sign, signifying V for Victory.... Lower right, the hard-working Rally committee pauses in the midst of its many duties for the photographer. r 1J£ WJ1?HJJIHjT Ill] J1T £ ... rllJJlJll1J P !lWW!lW I-Iomecoming Number September, 1942 Return Postage Guaranteed

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Page 1: ~T rllJJlJll1J P!lWW!lW

Upper left the South Hall Girls exhibit their prize-winning sentiment toward the Washington Huskies Center the students stand as the Cougar fight song is played Upper right another Homecoming sign the first prize exhibit of the AGDs Center left the WSC cheering section greets the Idaho Vandals Center the Delta Delta Delta drummers pershy

form for the huge Homecoming crowd Center right Butch IIs third birthday is heralded by the card section Lower left the Idaho students gather at the gatesbull Lower center ATOs winning Homecoming sign signifying V for Victory Lower right the hard-working Rally committee pauses in the midst of its many duties for the photographer

r1Jpound WJ1HJJIHjTIll] ~TJ1Tpound

rllJJlJll1J PlWWlW I-Iomecoming Number

September 1942

Return Postage Guaranteed

To the Class of 42 This column Is dedicated to last years gradushy

ates Its length and content will depend upon the newsnotes received by the Aluunl Ollice This Is yours Class of 42 contribute to It often

Ted Birchill ~rites that he is awaiting his caII from the army at Govan Washshyington Headley Brown is in the navy He can be reached at Box 265 Route 2

Santa Cruz California John Wm Brownell is living at E 623 Bridgeport Avenue in Spokane where he is working as an electrical engineer Lt Jerry D Clarke is at Fort Francis E Warren 2 M C Rep Tr Center Wyoming Doroshythy A Colpitts is working as a secretary in Seattle 4733 - 17th N E wiII reach her Lloyd Cook has accepted a position as coordinator of Distributive Education in the Tucson School system Hes living at 518 East Third Tucson Arizona

Gordon G Dewey is a registered pharshymacist at Sedro-WooIIey George Holte takes first prize for having the longest title Here it is Assistant personnel clerk in the regional headquarters of the office for Emergency Management in Seattle He reports that a local Tri-DeIt is taking up his evenings while he waits for the army George is living at 4510 shy21 Avenue N E Bernice O Crawford has a feIIowship at CorneIl University where she wiII teach child welfare and home economics Roberta Fullmer is teaching home economics general science and girls PE at Granger

The engagement of Ellen Dawson to Kendry Gimlin ex40 was announced this summer EIIen plans on teaching vocational home economics at Tieton for one year before taking the second ring Wilton Colyer is teaching industrial arts at Kenewick Carroll Tretner the beaushytiful blonde Tri-Delt wiII be music supshyervisor at Cashmere this year The edu shycational staff at Thorp Washington claims Paul E Gronemeier who wiII be in charge of the band glee club typing

and social science

Daniel P Smith informed us that he is working in a dairy pasteurizing plant and is living at Route 2 Box 210 Kent Washington Lily K Olsen is a dietitian interne and is living at 44 West Cedar Street Boston Massachusetts Margaret Girvin is employed in the promotion deshypartment of the Seattle times She is livshying at 4529 - 17 N E Seattle William S Yorozu is a landscape designer aHd contractor in Spokane W 240Y Main Street wiII reach him Willarel Zellmer has gone into Government Service Work

7fte WaShin9ton ~tate

alumni Powwow

Volume XXXI Number 7 September 1942

Joe F Caraher 35 Secretary Edna M Simmons 43 Editor

SEPTEMBER CONTENTS

bull To the Class of 42 - 2

bull Homecoming Plans and Football Outlook - 3

bull Letters from Alumni - 4

bull Campus Hits and Misses - 5

bull Cougars in the Service - 6

bull From Hotel Management to Quarter Masters Corp - 7

bull Lost Alumni Lists - 8-9

bull In This Alumni W orId 10-11

w S C ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OFFICERS 1942-43

Thad Byrne 25 Spokane C L Hix 09 PuIIman President Treasurer

M R Ebner 27 PuIIman Joe Caraher 35 Seattle First Vice President Executive Secretary

Helen Dare 37 Spokane Edna M Simmons 43 Pullman Second Vice President Asst Executive Secretary

Directors -at- Large Conrad Kromm 25 Aberdeen Fred Schroeder 29 Portland

Ed Erickson 40 Seattle Fred TaIley 17 Spokane Virginia Shaw 23 Pullman

Athletic Council Asa V Clark 16 PuIlman Milton Martin 26 Clarkston

Earl V Foster 23 PuIIman

Executive Committee Thad Byrne 25 Spokane Eri B Parker 18 PulIman

Amy LeweIlen 17 PuIlman H M Chambers 13 PuIIman Bud Matsen 43 Goldendale

The Washington State Alumni Powwow published monthly except In July and August Established In 1910 the magazine Is a digest of news devoted to the State College of Washington and Its alumnl The magazine Is published by the Alumni Association of the State College of Washington Pullman Washington Subscription price Is $150 per year Entered as second class matter June 19 1919 at the postofflce Pullman Washngton under act of Congress March 3 1879 Address all communications concerning the magazine to Room 211 Administration buIlding Pullman Washington Nashytional advertising representative The Graduate Group 30 Rockefeller Plaza New York City Member American Alumni Council

POWWOW September 1941 2

Homecoming Plans and Football Outlook Washington State alumni are getting

all primed for one of the most historishycal returns to their Alma Mater which they have ever planned Everything bears out the historical feature of this Homecoming game with Oregon on Saturday October 3

Many graduates and former stushydents are scheduling their trips so as to be in Pullman for the big noise parade and rally Friday evening This pre-game demonstration is always one of the most colorful features of a Washington State Homecoming

Alumni will register at the Alumni Office 211 Administration Building starting at three oclock Friday aftershynoon and on Saturday registration headquarters will be at the Washingshyton Hotel the official alumni headshyquarters for the 1942 Homecoming At both of these places alumni may purchase tickets to the annual Homeshycoming dance which will be held Satshyurday evening

The luncheon which is usually held for alumni at Homecoming will not be held this year Because of the uncershytainty in the number of returning alumni everyone thought it would be better to let the luncheon go for this year But we want every alumnus and friend to feel that the Washington Hotel is the greeting and visiting place for the weekend

The game needs no advertising as all Homecoming games are peppy thrillshying and the crowds go wild After the alumni and visitors have recovered their voices if that is possible and have found a snack to eat at the Hotel after the game they will be honored at the annual Homecoming dance in the Mens and Womens Gymnasiums

Homecomings at Vrashington State date from 1913 when Graduate Manshyager John Jones instituted the middotidea They have always been one of the colshyorful highlights of the college year the one time when the boys and girls of way back when once more go collegiate And if you dont think they really go collegiate just fill your car to capacity to save on gas and tires

powwow Seplember 1841

and drop down to Pullman Saturday October 3 and check up for yourself

Arthur (Spud) Carpenter 31 has been appointed Alumni Big Chief for the Homecoming festivities His outstretched hand will help you over the Welcome mat thats always out at the W S C campus

Heres the tentative program which has been made out so far

FRIDAY OCTOBER 2

3 00 PM Registration Alumni Ofshyfice Ad Bldg

6 00 PM Open House conducted by group houses and dormishytories

7 30 PM Noise Parade Campus and through Group House Disshytrict

800 PM Homecoming Pep Rally

SATURDAY OCTOBER 3

800 AM Alumni Association Board of D ire c tor s meeting Washington Hotel

9 00 AM Reg i s t rat i on begins at Washington Hotel

200 PMOregon vs Washington State Rogers Field

4 30 PM Get-together for Alumni and Friends at the Cougar Roundtable Club ( over Strupplers)

Continuation of Registrashytion at Hotel and Cougar Roundtable Club

900 PM Homecoming Dance sponshysored by ASSCW

Sounds like fun doesnt it If you dont think so come on over and weII prove it to you

~

Grid Outlook Bright -- IF w s C Expects Football Talent To

Rate High Hollingberys 17th Season

With the same problem of if faced by all other colleges Vl ashingshyton State looks to the 1942 football season and sees rays of sunshine Hottest team of the Coast at the end of last season the Pullman club holds excellent prospects for the coming campaign providing the material reshyturns to school It will be likely that some of the expected talent will be missing as a result of war service and Defense jobs but the same can be apshyplied to the opposition so Washington State should be no worse off in comshyparison

Lost Nine Veterans From the 1941 W S C team which

defeated the Coast and Rose Bowl champions of Oregon State along with the defending champs of Stanford and Oregon California Idaho and Gonzaga nine veterans including six starters have been lost by graduation They are Joe Beckman and Jim W ooddy tackles Stan Doepke and Stan Zemny guards Dale Gentry Herb Godfrey and Fred Spiegelberg ends and Bill Sewell and Felix Fletshycher halfbacks

Three lettermen eligible for the 1942 season have joined the service with others likely to go Bill Holmes slated for starting right half Eddie Pillings a fleet halfback and Joe Hemel veshyeran end are already in uniform

Stalwarts of the 1941 team who are on the faIl roster are BiIl Remington

(Continued on Page Seven)

3

LETTERS FROM ALUMNI

Mary Frances Dawson

Mary Frances Dawson 21 went to Egypt in the autumn of 1922 as a misshysionarY under the United Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions and has been there in Cairo since then with the excepshytion of two furlough years spent at PuIlshyman Miss Dawson returned to the United States last winter and the foIlowshying is a letter she wrote teIling of her experiences on her trip home

This is to give you notice that my address has been changed from Cairo Egypt to 112 North Fifth Avenue Yakishyma Washington

In May (1941) I received a letter from the Alumni Office which had been writshyten in January At the time it arrived I was in the hospital and very shortly after that I packed up to come home After waiting more than a month we were on our way A party of thirty missionaries from Cairo and about sixty from Amerishycan University of Beirut Syria travelled together Half of the number were childshyren under sixteen We went by one of His Majestys troopships (formerly the Aquatania) from Suez sailing July 30th to Sydney Australia twenty-three days which was very good time We were two days in Colombo where we lost the most of our traveIling companions who were something more than a thousand Italian prisoners-of-war Our next stoR was Freshyman tIe Australia but as our ship anchshyored outside the harbor and it was stormy we were not allowed off the boat

After two days there we went on to Sydney going south of Tasmania That bit was rather cold as we were rather far south and it was the winter time down yonder down under perhaps I should say We chafed a bit at having to stay in Sydney for four weeks but it was a pleasant place to be delayed The Ausshytralians were most friendly and kind Sydney is more like an American city than any other I have ever visited The secretary of the Australian-American Coshyoperation Movement was most kind and did a great deal for us I had several very interesting visits in some of the Domestic Science High Schools Australia is a big sparsely populated country

From Sydney we came on the Monshyterey of the Matson Line eighteen days to San Francisco The time was broken up with an overnight stop about twentyshysix hours at Auckland New Zealand and stops of several hours at Suva Fiji Pago Pago American Samoa Honulu and Los Angeles On this boat there were about two hundred and fifty civilian passengers and six hundred Australian and New Zealander airmen some ready to go on active service and the larger number to be trained some place in America We arrived in San Francisco on October 7th

The entire journey was made without mishaps of any kind On the troopship we were not as comfortable as on the Monterey but we really could not comshyplain as we were better off than we had thought we might be from stories we had heard of others who had travelIed from the Middle East The ship was steady going food was adequate The first two or three days in the Red Sea were hot I hope that I will never be hotter The ship traveIled under complete blackshyout AI1 windows and portholes were closed before sunset and kept that way tiII daylight the next morning This was not only a precaution against light showshying but also a safeguard against the ship so rapidly fiIling with water should she be struck We kept our life preservers in a place easily gotten and things laid by just in case-but some of us had been doing that in Cairo that is keeping things laid by in case of an air raid As to whether we ~ere near a raider at any time I do not know Before we reached Colombo we had had boat drilIs and had been given instructions After we left Colombo the Captain calIed us alI in and said that while he did not want to frightshyen us he wanted us to realize that we were in very dangerous waters and he went on emphasizing instructions already given us and giving rather more explicit ones He also said that when the signal

sounded again it would be the real thing (we had had three drils before this) but it did not sound again

Up until the time I left Cairo had had no bombs within the city but there had been a good many alerts and we at the American Mission ColIege for Girls had made a good many trips to the air raid shelter Two nights before I left the siren went about two am We had all gone over to the shelter which is in a building adjoining our dormitory I went back into the main building to check up when I saw one plane and saw two flares dropped There was a good deal of anti-aircraft fire That night there were said to have been five enemy planes over the city A little later Cairo did suffer some from bombing but I have not heard to what extent

But in spite of what is going on there people go on living in much the same routine There is not as much social life partly because of blackout conditions The past year the school with which I am connected had the largest enrolIment it had ever had We are having difficulty in getting teachers as we have always carried a number of American teachers

Since beginning this letter I hear that Dr Bryan has passed away A wonderful man he was and the Colege and State owe him much

Sincerely

Signed Mary Frances Dawson 21

Captain Langley (Continued on Page Eleven)

POWWOW Seplember ltf 4

CAMPUS HITS AND MISSES The American Alumni Council of

which the WSC Alumni Association is a member has proven its worth once again The AAC has just completed an arrangement with the War Departshyment whereby all their members will receive the name and address of every alumnus of their school who goes into the army-and within one week of his induction

~ The new Army Civilian Pilot Trainshy

ing Course is going forward with flyshying colors The 20 trainees are on the job 12 hours a day and have few idle minutes according to Prof Robert S Neilson military instructor athletic director and coordinator The daily schedule begins with calisthenics at 5 30 followed by flight training at the airport during the mori-ting Military drill and classroom instruction occushypy the afternoon and early evening The men now in training will complete their elementary work in eight weeks and then advance to secondary trainshying so that a new group can be started

~ The seven-semester reign as scholarshy

ship queens of the Washington State campus has ended for Kappa Alpha Theta national sorority when they were forced into second place by Alshypha Gamma Delta national sorority in the group scholastic standings for the spring semester announces Regisshytrar Frank T Barnard In third place is Maple Cottage trailed by Pi Beta Phi national sorority only 01 of a point below

Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity headed the mens group for the fourth consecutive time with an average of 8634 foIlowed by Acacia fraternity and Waller Hall

~ Three promotions have been made

on the ROTC staff at WSC Captain Howard H House has been promoted to the rank of major First Lieutenshyants George L Converse and Jerry D Naimy have gone one step up and are now wearing captains bars

powwow September 1841

Eleven different languages are the achievement of the nine soldiers now studying the Japanese language under the direction of Rev~rend John Cobb Spokane pastor Their classes are being held in CoIlege Hall Besides their language accomplishments which include fluent use of Hebrew Greek Sioux Indian Latin Portugese and Armenian as well as French Spanish Italian German and Polish these men may boast of representing almost every section of the United States They came from Massachusetts N~w York Wisconsin Illinois Kentucky Florida Texas South Dakota and Washington

Lt Howard Greer The Navy has called Lt Greer from his Publicity Directors desk in the Graduate Managers Office He is now in Rhode Island

The occupations of these men before they started military service indicate that there is much versatility among army men Ten weeks ago one of them was a footbaIl and basketball

coach and a professional boxer anshyother was a night club operator before he volunteered his services in May The others were in occupations such as operator of a soap business a deshypartment of health laboratory technishycian an accountant an assistant to a museum director and middot a student at Hamilton College

The Pullman-WSC stocking drive was a great success The silk hose will be sent to the Orient by the American Bureau for Medical Aid to China There they will be used as bandages for injured Chinese soldiers in the Asiatic war zones Mrs Robert S Neilson lead among individual conshytributors as she offered 56 stockings to the drive

~ The Phi Kappa Alpha house won

the $250 prize offered to the group on the campus for the best essay on The Use of Washington Lumber Prodshyucts The West Coast Lumbermans Association sponsored the contest on both this campus and the University of Washington campus Raymond Ellis and Carl Henry wrote the essay that won the prize on this campus

Leroy Bradbury ASSCW President

ASSCW Loses Officers Presidentshyelect Marvin Gilberg (Greek) has reshysigned both the ASSCW presidency and the co-captaincy of the basketball team to enter University of California Dental School in San Francisco Wilshyma Richardson (Independent) camshypus beauty was elected ASSCW Secshyretary but writes she wont be on the campus this year either The engageshyment of these two was announced this summer Could be somethings a going on but we wouldnt be a knowing shyyet

Bruce Bruchler who was elected Independent Junior Man on the Board of Control writes that he is now servshying Uncle Sam at Fort Douglas Utah so wont be back

Leroy Bradbury (Independent) will step up from the Vice-Presidents chair to take the reigns of the Associshyated Students this fall His first job will be to fill the other vacancies in his Board of Control

5

COUGARS IN THE SERVICE Three Washington State College alumshy

ni have been advanced to the rank of brigadier general it was announced by the war department

They are Lowell W Brooks 17 proshymoted from colonel infantry July 31 1942 Joseph L Philips 14 promoted from colonel cavalry July 28 1942 now assigned to army group Washington DC and S Lusker McCroskey 16 proshymoted from colonel coast artillery corps June 24 1942

Also listed by the department was a partial list containing names of seven WSC alumni who are now colonels and three who are lieutenant colonels in the United States service

Those listed as colonels were Arthur O Walsh 17 finance department (see write-up in June POWWOW) R H Back 18 infantry M V Fortier 16 ordinance department R M ODay 15 infantry now in the Pacific theater of war Harold G Holt 15 cavalry on duty with armored division (see write-up in June POWWOW) and William A Wapshypenstein 20 infantry who is on duty at a foreign station

The Lieutenant colonels were Hubert S Miller 21 corps of engineers Stanley M Nevin 25 veterinary corps now on duty at a foreign station and Cal Phillips 33 who is post adjutant at Randolph Field Texas and who formerly was WSC Alumni Secretary

Washington State College students who were graduated in class 42-F from Enid Army Flying School Oklahoma were Jack E Turner (1936-41) and Clark O Cordill (1935-40) Aviation Cadet Turshyner went to the Air Corps Advanced Flyshying School Lake Charles La and Aviashytion Cadet Cordill to the Air Corps Advanced Flying School Mission Texas Lt Bill Ambrosius 40 has been in the Phillipines and Java flying bombers He is now in Australia where he is a Finance Officer Censor Officer and Squadron Adjutant Ed Zydowsky freshman footshyball and baseball player in 1937 is in the army at Camp Grant Illinois playing on the baseball team In a game versus the Chanute Field baseball team the other day Ed hit one of the longest home runs ever seen in those parts

The promotion of Woodson Bennett 38 from the rank of First Lieutenant to that of Captain in the Medical Corps United States Army was announced by headquarters of the Medical Field Service School Carlisle Barracks Pa where Captain Bennett is an instructor in the Officer Candidate School Staff Sergeant

Howard R Melvin Jr 37 has been transferred to the Army Air Forces new Basic Flying School near Marana Arishyzona a desert villag~ some thirty miles from Tucson Prior to his induction into the Army Sgt Melvin was an accountant associated with the New York office of Price Waterhouse amp Co He is still enshygaged in accounting activities being now the assistant to the Finance Officer at themiddot Marana base Capt D R Morgan 30 is with General McArthur and his troops in Australia

Names that yesterday made headlines on local sports pages are today laboring in patriotic anonymity to impart toughshyening physical training to the Army flyshyers of tomorrow On the roster of physhysical middot training instructors in the West Coast Army Air Forces Training Center Santa Ana California are men who made sports history Three former WSCers arc John Klumb 39 Domonic George 35 and Joseph J Koegler 29

Second Lieutenant Louis 1 Miller 38 to 41 was commissioned as an officer in the U S Army Air Force at the Lubbock Army Flying School Lubbock Texas on July 3 1942 After a period of primary training at Pine Bluff Arkansas Lt Milshyler went to Perrin Field Texas for basic instruction At the Lubbock Army Flying School one of the newest and biggest in Americas victory program his training was in the twin-engine bomber type of aircraft Captain and Mrs Glen K Smith 36 are now at Fort Sam Houston Texas where Captain Smith is in the Medical Department of the Service School at the Station Hospital He writes that he had a letter from Ed Goldsworthy 36 inshyforming him that Ed and Oscar Schoff had been promoted to the grade of captain and are on duty in Puerto Rico

From the rank of Second Lieutenant to Captain in six months is the jump that Charles W Hoffman 41 took He reshyceived his wings and was commissioned as 2nd Lt on December 13 1941 and received his Captaincy in June 1942 Neil Seehom 40 to 42 has gone to New London Conn to attend the coast guard academy there He gained his place by passing competitive examinations He was secretary of the Intercollegiate Knights in his sophomore year at college

WSC WOMEN PLAY THEIR PART

Lois E Hamilton 31 has been ordershyed to San Francisco from where she will leave for forei gn duty as Head Dietitian in the U S Army Her orders were to

take enough clothing for three years Dorothy Bussard 34 is in Des Moines Iowa as part of Washingtons contingent of 46 to receive training in the Womens Army Auxiliary Corps

Judith McWhorter 39 Yakima and Janet Oswalt 42 Wilbur are new memshybers of the Women Appointed for Volunshyteer Emergency Service-WAVES-and will begin training at Smith college Northampton Mass

Graduating with the first WAAC class at Fort Des Moines was Dorothy McshyLellan Sunnyside 1939 business adminisshytration graduate

Helen E Dare 37 Second Vice Presishydent of the W S C Alumni Association wrote on August 18

I have accepted a position as personshynel technician with the Air Force Comshymand which will keep me traveling throughout the United States I am sorry to have to give up my new position in the Alumni Association but perhaps I can sell the Cougars There are only 60 of these trained technicians in the counshytry and a group of us (5) ar e the first girls to be accepted for the position so we are thrilled about it all and are deshytermined to do a good job

~

How About A Letter When Rodney Bittner 41 sent in his

$150 for another years subscription to the POWWOW he sent this note along

Just thought I would take time out between Jap bombs to write a few lines My folks forward the magazine to me and I do enjoy it (when possible to get our mail)

Would it be possible to put a bit in it asking any of myoid friends (if any) to drop a line What mail we sailors receive is greatly appreciated I am doing medical work on board ship and at times am very busy

On April 18 1942 I received commisshysion in Naval Reserve as an Ensign Since first of 1941 have been on active duty in Navy in Medical Corp and still am Also went through the December 7 1941 blitz at Pearl Harbor and other naval battles Hope to be in Naval Reshysearch Lab before the year is over Would appreciate hearing from anybodY who remembers me Address is USS MEDUSA c-o Fleet Postmaster San Francisco California or home address is 5049 South Thompson Tacoma Washshyington

POWWOW September 184 6

From Hotel Manageshyment To Quarter Masters Corps

By Shirley Ingram

Quarter Masters Corps-the subsist shyence division and commissary work of the army and navy finds priority value in college students trained in Hotel Adshymanagement says Lieut Col William L Morrison acting commandant Washshyington State College Military Science and Tactics

What mans army or navy would not find a growing need for men trained in the principfes of food selection and prepshyaration to manage commissary units The hotel field has long ranked near the top in big business but today the need for college trained men is causing unshyprecedented growth

With roots firmly fixed in chemical scishyence and nutritional knowledge and with practical work done in the large quantity kitchens of the State College food unitsshythe butcher shop and the bakeshop at the Commons-with all this background and advanced ROTC training these stushydents will find the challenging appetites of soldiers in the line of duty

During the school year they are given experience in the Hotel Washington in Pullman where they work in many capashycities-practicing the theory of classshyrooms-ranging from bus boys to assist shyant chefs to desk clerks

In addition to fifteen major home ecoshynomics courses Hotel Administration students take a number of courses in the school of business administration to beshycome acquainted with methods of acshycounting Courses in economics money and banking business finance advertisshying business law and labor problems give them an additional background for their work and for handling Uncle Sams finances Other courses demandshying their complete knowledge are psyshychology aFchitecture plumbing and enshygineering personnel management and equipment engineering

Twelve outstanding hotel men of the Northwest have been selected as an adshyvisory committee to aid and direct in the

planning of the Hotel Administration course Mr Walter CHst Culmstock Arms Mr James A McCluskey Davenshyport Hotel and Mr Sam Jordon Sposhykane Mr Harry Gowman Gowman Hotel Mr Frank Hull Olympia Hotel Mr Harold Dupar and Mr Frank W Thurston New Washington Hotel Mr A J Barash Secretary of the Washingshyton State Hotel Association Seattle Mr Thad Pierce Hotel Olympia Olympia Mr Earl McInnes Hotel MultnomahbullPOWWOW September lUI

Portland Mr Guy Toombes Hotel Utah Salt Lake City and Mr Carl Morck Morck Hotel Aberdeen compose the committee

Spokane serves as the laboratory for field trips that are taken to give the stushydents first hand knowledge of hotels Affiliated with the Spokane Chapter No 8 of Hotel 6reeters of America a WSC Greeters Club has been formed by Hotel students

In cooperation with the Spokane chaRshyter speakers are brought to the college at various times to discuss present probshylems in the hotel field A $100 scholarshyship is awarded each year to an outshystanding junior by the Spokane Hotel Greeters

The following partial roster of gradushyates of the Hotel Administration course of the State College shows their place in the United States Army and Navy-Capshytain Ward Walker Recreation Center Fort Lewis Ensign Robert H Hoffman U S Navy Air Force Washington DC First Lt Earl Redlin Infantry Camp Roberts Calif First Lt Harry Lane Army Quartermaster Corps Riverside Calif Second Lt Deane Cooper Officer Sale School Air Corps Flying School Victorville Calif Maurice Youngs Air Corps Flying School Stockton Calif

Indeed the 1942 hotel-military students are finding a new line of defense and are being geared in an all out effort to do their part in the subsistence dishyvision

~ HOMECOMING 1941

Board of Directors Meetinit

Alumni registering

Football Outlook (Continued Irom Page Three)

center Bill Ward left guard Nick Susoeff right end Jay Stoves left halfback Fred Small quarter and Bob Kennedy fullback all of whom did outstanding work last autumn George Dyson and Jim Wright a pair of 225-pounders who saw considerashyble action as sophomores last year are the probable starters at tackle

Renfro Will Return

Dick Renfro boxcar back who stayed out of college last year after two seasons of fine varsity service is due to be back and will be assigned to the blocking quarterback post Tom Brannigan stocky guard of the last two years was moved to quarter durshying spring practice and is expected to remain there

Frank Akins hard-running twoshyyear veteran halfback who was out of school last year will be back and will probably see duty at right half instead of left Earl Brenneis who broke in as a sophomore last fall will also be at right half Frank Londos husky fuIIshyback vet will bolster the backfield

Other lettermen on the list include Buster Hollingbery center Rod Giske and Gene Arger guards Mel Holben and Bill Gustafson tackles Max Dodge end and Jim Boyle quartershyback

Good Soph Prospects

Up from last years freshmen Jelly Anderson end Harry Planck guard and Jim Thompson halfback are topshynotch varsity prospects Marv Walker junior college transfer is a capable performer at halfback while Gene Evans and Benton Bangs both backs Were reserves last year

Other sophomore candidates include Vern Oliver center Tom Parry and John Godfrey guards Rufus Boldshyman and Les Metzger tackles Ralph Thompson George Kitna and Wallace Kramer ends and Ron Waggoner fullback

~ Plan now to see the Cougars in action

on Homecoming October 3

7

NEEDED Addresses For These Missing Washington Staters

A constant effort is being made to keep track of State College alumni but despite the effort it becomes a real task to know just where everyone is located During the past year many lost alumni have been founel but others have dropped out of sight and the list remains about the same

We need your help I Check over the alumni listed in both the Long Lost and Newly Lost lists and let Us know if you have any addresses or information which would lead to addresses of these people You will find a form for returning this information on the next page Thank you

Newly Lost 1910 Imus Clifford C 1914 Foster Dean Edward 1916 Hart Stadden S 1917 Griffith Mrs George

(Irene Palmer) 1918 Goertzen Mrs J A

(Alma Anderson) Homme Olav H 19 19 Rees Florence M Cutler Clarence W 1920 Brooks Mrs Juanita Ridenaur Horace Stam Dr -Edward L 192 3 Hollingsworth Walter M 192 4 Greenberg Nathan Lavin William A Williams Earl A bull Wooddy Mrs Edith L 192 5 Casey Sister Maureen Gage Kenneth McKillip William A Vincent Mrs Walter E

(Jennie Secrest) 1926 Wilfong Mrs J L

(Gladys Gue) 192 7 Mueller Vivian 1 Olson Emanuel Wilson Harry K 1928 Graham Lola Vivien Johnson Kenneth R Miller William A 1929 Yuni Richard V 1930 Osterman Mrs Leo

(Ana N egoescu) Pittman Chester Allen Swartz Helen Jane 1931 Rowland Katharine 1932 Guisleman George V Oien Gustav T middot Pohlman H Kingsley 1933 Henderson Earl L Van Doren Winifred M 1934 Jackson Virgil M Matthews John S Richey Loran P Wilson William F 1936 Agee James R Stewart Lorne J W Talcott Robert Van Patten

8

1937 Marlatt Leigh R 1938 McCabe Mrs Burton

(Helen Wersen) Siepman Richard D 1939 Tomita Junichi 1940 Ross Earle R 1941 Atkin Shirlen E Byers Doris V Fernandez Cipriana C Zier Ruth Lillian 1942 Ashton Willard H Hoop Jay Dee Jasper Dr Donald E Robinson LeRoy D

Long Lost 1899 Larkin Charles T 1900 Anderson John Frank Brown Peter

1903 Wallis William Alden 1~04 Carter Emily Barker Foster Sidney F 1906 McKenzie Frank William 1907 Andrews Mrs Maude C Bryant Roy E Grice Mrs Otto (Florence

Knepper) 1908 Baddeley Dr Joseph Clarence Burg Mrs Walter A (Myrtle

Boyles) Simmons John Leslie Wilson Frank E Woods Tony W

(f~fi Clarence E Kelly Edna Rosene Laird Marple Everett Miller Claude A Smith Virgil Rodney Talbot Charles William 19 10 Bobeau Lucius McClellan Limon Gregorio ~II Couch Dr Otto Justin Maeda Teruzo Marston William Ray Rogers Jessie B Strickler Clair H 1912 Reeder George Kingsburg Sands Olea M Warwick Mrs Preston (Mary

Mann) 1913 Craner Albert E Creveling Alfred Benjamin Gaddis Dee Kirsch Karl

Knapp Harold Stanford Leavitt Clarence Ashton 1914 Almen Herman Victor Long Delbert C Meyer Henry William Newman Mrs Pauline Davis

(Pauline Davis) Rodgers Roliert Julius Spiers Archibald L C Wilson Philip Guy 191 5 Brown Stonewall Koppen Walter J McCormick Francis Howard Ney John Henry Platt Mrs Philip S Anette

Nicholl) Puckett Thomas C Stendquist Lender L 1916 Batts Bertha A McLaughlin George Swanson Swen Arthur Van Horn Bower 1917 Baker Adolph Irvin Greene Mrs W H C (Chrismiddot

tine M Wood)Humphrey Homer W Jeffrey Blanche C Luce Dr Harry C Miller Aubrey C Richardson Elizabeth Roach Mrs C M (Etl)a Batts)Russell Fred Lawrence Sato Jachi Sato Shinijiro Todd Paul Edward 19 1 8 Boyle Margaret Croonquistz Mrs Hugh A

(Helen T Holroyd)Ewing Clarence Charles Krafft E Gertrude Sisseau Mrs Fred G (Ora

Mabel Hickman)Smith Mrs Charlotte Robinson Traeger LeRoy Edwin

1919 Beck Esther LydiaJudges Bertha rhistlewaite Garnet VirgilWhitford Richard W

1920 Brett Matie DorothyBrooks Bert Edgar Mary Charlotte Henderson Winfield Lester Martin Harrison G McAninch Mrs Marion E

(Evelyn N Bradbury)Moore Gladys B Riviere Mrs Frank (Suzanne

M Moinard)Sera Sei Ropion Yvonne GeorgetteRitchie Helen Mae Seyer Mary Emily Shroll Walter Scott Shaw Robert L Stam Dr Edward Lockwood Stanton Will ClydeTainaka Ben Katsumi Valdivieso Fausto Wright Geraldine Ziegler Adolph

1921 Bartruff John A Black Mrs Van Nest (Mry

Todd Hodges) Collins Homer Arthur Fitch Mrs Clara

(Clara Hefty) Holmes Edna Alice Isamu Inouye Kruger John Henry Lyse Alvin Theodore Lytle Nelson Edwin Medby Arthur Moodhe David Herbert Muir Esther Davidson Myers Earl H Newland Mrs Ruth H

(Charles J) Rinehart John Marshall Street Mrs Julian

(Marguerite Skibeness) Taggert David Vander Heyden Joseph Wm M Watzek Peter Whitman Mrs Lorna Longwell 1922 Belknap Clifford Vernon Carr Mildred Irene Chamberlain Lowell Colby Phillip Henry Fox Heggmaier Caroline

Kee Mrs W H (Loree Whitney)

Patrick James G Pohl Clara Mildred Robin Lyla Josephine Watson James Winkler Stanley C 192 3 Bessette Josephine A Byrnes Eleanor Dunegan Irvin Ferguson Dewitt Talmage French Olive Bell Hansen Arthur Caleb Ideno Harry H Ishiyama Eiitsu Kidnay Katherine Page Carroll Gordon Taylor Harry Albert Zimmerman Ernest Theodore 1924 Barnes Ralph Howard Carlile Dallas Elijah Howard Henry R Johnson Merrit H Liu Min Chang Messenger William P Reese Chester G Simmons Mrs Estella J Snodgrass Milton Dean Steiner Marie Anne TeeGarden Mrs Lewis

(Alice Prindle) Westbrook John Lewis

192 5 Andes Mrs James O

(Esther Crawford) Campbell John Gordon Chandler Norman Edwards Ruth Harbeck Glenn C Hibbard Lorin G Hinton Paul Johnson Askel Herbert Kerr H Catherine Moore Margaret Newton George A Skinner Mrs Robert

(Eva Nordin) Smith Edward N White Mary Anieta Yasuda Masao

1926 Ballantyne Helen Man Coberly Dwight Crane Esther Lenore Davenport Earle Glenn Fisher William Alonzo Gillis Ewen Hess Mildred Eula Johnson Dr Walford Joseph Kreider Anna C Lapp Paul Alfred McIntire Aileen Olive Naggy Steve Norton Alice Augusta Owen Roy Martin Walker Clarence Wright Walton Edward Deane Mamie Engstrom Alva Carl Gudger Bessie Leona Johnson Frank J Largent Harry E Logan Mrs Hugh L

(Ethel Dora Keevy) McGucken Edward G Nakagawa Taniji Harry Nelson James Ade Okui James Jito Purnell Orien Virgil Sievers Mrs George

(Nelle V Jones) Smith David J Westbrook Mrs Jane Howe Worlds Clarence H

1928 Bennett Lawrence M Kowal Joe Lee Chite Meeker Herbert L Olson Esther Louise Taylor James Eldon Wilkie Mildred LaVelle

1929 Aquino Antonio Quesada Connolly Pat Wlliam Dial Mabel Jacobson Keener John Burton Jr Lester Viola G McFarland Mrs Marion Bush Lew Mi Ryan Mrs William C

(Maxine Damrell) Scranton Idol N Stevenson Robert S VanBossche Leonard

lowwow September 1141

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbull bullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1930 Allison James Frank Bailey Mrs Lyman N

(Helen Bolitho)Fang Tsung Han Donald Lewis Fox Hennessy Mary Lemmia Lavett AntollY Eustace Long F Cecil Olson Ruth Wilamena Platter John Laurence Ralph Harry Robert Roberts Mary Elizabeth Schirmer Evalyne Carolyn Steelman Julien Randolph Veldee Mrs R Marie

1931 Abey Lester E Chun William B Fuller David Thomas Fulmer Fred Roy McCall Harriett Irene Mahoney Alice Madelon Nelson M Maxine Schimelpfenig Clyde F Wilson James Walker

1932 Braganza Bonifacio B Carlson Oscar Theodore Gage Frank Henry Kaylor Raymond Doyle Meyers Merton Isabelle Micu Genenato Realin Miyota Nathaniel Susumu Noel James P Nyuha Bert K Padua Andrew M Suguitan Eustaquio Abella

1933 Corner Harold A Howland Alice Katherine Imes Eva Carol Layos Robert D Miller Monroe Eugene Ysui Yung Chi Young JeChun

1934 ~Balatero Jose Ancheta Galbraith Robert Donald ~ Herren Mary Peyton Hsu Pin Ling ~ Hytpwitz Lawrence David Leonard James Thomas ~ Little Myrtle Louise Ramos Inocencio Raguine ~ Scott Edward Rodney ~1935 ~ Dunbar Alver Herrold Dwight Elmer Jones Del E Lundberg Bert OmiddotShea Bill S Pontesso Leonard Arthur Stewart Daniel R Stewart Everett Earle Lyle E Tompkins

1936 Burns David Robert Carter Daniel Melvin Clnk Herbert Edward Elson Miss Vinnie Haynes Laird H Jewell Charles Arthur Rhine Duhois Clarence

1937 Holmes Richard Arthur Hougen Esther Larson Joseph B Snodgrass Jack H

1938 Akers Margaret M Dawley Muriel E Jones Juanita Sexton Ormsbee Richard Armstrong Smith Harold Gus Tamura Yoshio

1939 Black Richard Clark Burton Sydney Leonard Stubbs James W Nelson Howard Edmond Palafox Anastacio Laida Wooten Clyde Curtis

94 Cook Albert Thomas Jessup Ellen Clara

POWWOW September 1941

The LOST Are Found Alumni Office 211 Adminstration Building Pullman Washington

Gentlement Id like to report the following round-up of alumni on your Lost list

(signed) Name __

Address

Name Class

Address __ _ _ _

Lead to gt[ address __

Narne _ Class _

Address _ - - ____

Lead to get address ~~____

Name _ Class ___

Address ______

Lead to get address - - - -__

Narne _ Class _

Address

Lead to get address ~-

s~- _- Class __

Lead to get address ~- --- -

I Alumni Records There is increasing need for a mondeg complete record of Washington State Alumni

To this end your Alumni Office has searched all possible college records and has also received a very few personal data records from individuals This form will give your Alumni Office the essential informlltion which it needs from you Please accommoshydate us by filling it out and returning it with the halance of this page Thank you

Narne _ Class Degree _

Business firm - Position

Residence address shy

Date of birth Where - shy

Married on To yen bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Who attended (College) __ Class

Children (ages and names) ~

--------------_---------------------_-----------------------_------------------_------------------------_--___-----__shy

War record - - yen

Extra-curricular activity since leaving College (public offices clubs honors etc)

--- ------------------------------ ~__-- ----__-_ _____-__-__-_--_ ____----

_---_ _------__ ----------_--__----_______ ___--_--_-----_---____ shy

If you have not already submitted one we should like a recent photograph of yourshyself for our biographical file

9

The right minded alumnus can do much to keep the institution in a right In This Alumni Worldlight before the citizens of the state upon which it must depend for supshyport H e is in a sense its advertising agency If he gets Oltt of touch or out of sympathy with his Alma Mater she thereby suffers a great loss

-Thomas Arkle Clark Long-time Dean of Men Univ of Illinois

NEW LIFE MEMBERS JULY AND AUGUST

H H WAITE 26

BERT S NORLING 26

COL HAROLD G HOLT 15

l1R AND MRS ALLEN MANRING 32

1910 Walter E Rutherford is the owner of Rutherfords Pharmacy in Oakesdale Washington

1923 Mrs Alfred C Schy (Ora West) is living at Lamont Washington The Westss have three children Alfred Lee 6 Alan 4 and Marjorie Jane 2

1924 Mr and Mrs Dorcy D Nog1ey (Ida Hedborg) have one son born March 24 1939 They live at 684 Highland Avenue Glen Ellyn Illinois

1926 J F Gates is Property Officer and Comshypany Quarter Master at Camp Lee Vir-

How To Be A Member In Good Standing of the WSC Alumni

Association Its easy

You send cash money order or check amounting to $150 to the Alumni Office In return you receive a years subscription to the POWWOW official publication of the association printed ten times each year

Now that its on your mind why dont you - this minute - fill out the blank below and join an organization that is growing every day

Life Membership in the organization including years POWWOW $500

Name Class

Address City State

Please find $ for a years membership in the Association

Please bill me for the same amount on c and start sending POWWOW now

ginia He is an Entomologist

Mr and Mrs Harrie O Bohlke are livshying at 9547 - 24th Street N W Seattle Mr Bohlke is in the Industrial Departshyment of the Seattle Chamoer of Comshymerce From 1934 to 1941 he was the chief inspector for the Washington State Rignor Control Board and in 1939 he was in the Grand Lodge of BPOE

1927 Dr Harold Weatherman is a Pediatrician at the Rees-Stealy Clinic in San Diego California He lives at 3531 Arnold Ave

1928 James T Pringle is in the transportation Sales Department of Westinghouse Elecshytric and Manufacturing Company and lives at No 16 - 575 South Negley Aveshynue Pittsburgh Pennsylvania He and his wife (Margaret Palmer x 31) have a 20-month-old baby girl Helen

1930 Clifford E Long is in the United States

Employment Service as Manager and is ~ living at Hood River Oregon He is married and has two children In Janushyi ary 1940 he was given a medical disshy charge from the army with the rank of

Lieutenant At present he is a re-emshy_ ployment committeeman and works on the Selective Service System

Mrs Gara1d L Dixon (Helen Casey) lives at N 5111 Stone Street Bonners Ferry Idaho and has two children Carol Ann 10 and Jane Ellen 8 Mr and Mrs N Harold Squier are living at 850 Sunnyside Chicago Illinois with their nine-year-old daughter Nancy Maria Mr Squier is the training supershyvisor of the Commonwealth Edison and is acting as a teacher and worker in Civilian Defense

1931 Dr Esther M Roehr lives with her Docshytor husband at 903 E John Seattle They have two children Sandra Marie and Karen Eppa Stanley Ray is office nurse and anesthetist for Dr ] F Scott Surgeon in Yakima Washington She and her husband Dr Kenneth C Ray live at 213 N 24th Avenue Yakima Mr and Mrs Leonard W Swanson are living at Eatonville Washington The Swansons have two children Donald Alan 4 and Richard Lennart 1

1933 A Wilfred Welch is the Asst Engineer in the U S Engineer Dept at Eugene Oregon The Mr and Mrs (Verna C Robinson 32) live at 1380 Villord Street with Nancy Gayl their daughter

POWWOW September lUI 10

1934 Dr Marlowe Dittebrandt is a practicing physician in Portland Oregon She lives at the Heathman Hotel Her business adshydress is Room 212 Studio Building

1935 Alfred S Cleveland has been the Adshyministrative Assistant in the U S Deshypartment of Agriculture at Harvard Unishyversity Cambridge Mass In June howshyever he was called into active duty as a Lieutenant (JG) in the U S N R

1936 Rolf B Jorgensen is the Assistant Range Examiner of the U S Forest Service at Saint Anthony Idaho He married Doroshythy L Welch x31 in 1938 and they have one daughter almost two years old

Pauline Thomas is the P E and Health Teacher in the Seattle Public Schools and lives at 1019 Terry Avenue

1937 The chief wine chemist at the Gibson Wine Company in Fort Mitchell Kenshytucky is Wilbur Zeve1y whose address is Rivard Drive Dixie Highway

Robert E Click is Sanitarian in the Yakishyma City-County Health Dept He was treasurer of the Western Washington Dairy Technology Assn during 1941shy1942 406 South 27th Avenue Yakima Washington will reach him

~

Letters From Alums (Continued from Page Four)

Captain Claire Langley 36 sent in this letter to the alumni office recently from the Hawaiian Islands Captain Langleys address is 161st Infantry C O Service Co APO 25 coo P M San Francisco California

Pehea Oe

You see Im getting akamai Hawaiian isnt spoken much but the names are sure nani-if you say em right Its Ho no 100 100 not Hannah Loo lah That makes the kamaaina huhu and pegs you for a malihini And put a soft e on the end of Hawaii like this Hah weye e Thats no pilikia Now that youve had your language lesson Ill tell you someshything about the people and their islands The Hawaiian wahines are beautiful and their kane big and friendly And when they tell me Hele mai e ai they dont have to say that again I just answed Mahalo nui and move right in

Their best work though is Aloha

POWWOW SepCember lUI

Youll find it at the end of this letter But it means much more than just goodshybye Its Hello Love to You Good Morning How ya doing-any kind of a pleasant greeting And if a Hawaiian replies Aloha no believe it not he means Aloha yes Some newcomers get their Hawaiian all mixed up One pupule tourist wrote home that he was sitting on a lei with a lanai round his neck

Whats cookin Maybe a hukilau folshylowed by a big luau Hawaiians bake puaa with vegetables in an underground oven I ts some kaukau Your opu sure sticks out after all that fresh pineapple poi and fish-including one little feller they call humuhumunukunukuapuaa No wonder they say the language has vowel trouble at a lua a keikikane will walk right up an cocopalm in his bare feet and toss you down nuts to drink out of And then theyll shred the leaves and weave you a papale The hula dancers with pua in their hair sure go to town in fresh ti-Ieaf skirts and red muumuu They even put jitter-bugging in the shade And thats no hoopunipuni

But the deal here is surfing at Waikiki Riding a surfboard is a kick but takes practice Ill do mine in an outrigger canoe with a Hawaiian steering When he hollers Huki its lucky that old blue sea is wela for you certainly take a wetshyting as you toboggan down a huge wave Some thrill And no hele wawae back

For directions in Hawaii they tell you to go mauka or makai-thats to the mountains or toward the sea When you Go for broke its called welakahao If you cant understand all this letter look in the corner Thats a good start and when I learn some more Ill write you wikiwiki Good-bye now

Aloha nui

Signed Claire Langley

Helpful hints Pehea oe-Howre you Akamal-clever Nani-beautilul Huhu-angry Kamaalna-old timer lIaJlhini-newcomer Pilika-trouble Wahine-woman Kane-man Hele mal e ai-come In and eat Mahalo nul-thanks Pupule-looney Lei-garland Lanai-verandah Hukilau-net fishing Luau-feast Kelki-kane-boy Puaa-plg Kaukau-food Opu-stomach Papale-hat Pua-flower Muumuu-waist Hoopunlpun-lIe Huki-pull Wela-warm Hele wawae-walk Nul-big Wlklwlkl--quck

in other word Ity JOHN CLINTON

I As the His-CEE pano-Plymshy

outhandI bull grow old toshy~ gether my reshy

s12ect for the old bus inshycreases I think

when at last the war is over and new cars are once more availshyable Ill keep the H-P and have it stuffed

For example the other day one of the Union 011 engineers told me that If the speed of my enshygine were not reduced by the transmission and differential the H-P1ymouth would travel at something like 240 miles per houri Wowl

I never knew

before just tpMwhat the transshymission and _ differential ~ were for But it turns out that they tame the power generated by your engine and apply it in tableshyspoonfuls to the wheels And incidentally theyre two vital departments of your car

The transmission has something like 54 separate parts whizzing around Inside a sealed box It takes special lubricant that will withstand extreme high presshysure to lubricate that stuff 4nd If you let It go more than 5000 miles youre taking chances

Its too technical to explain in this space (even if I could do itl) but if you drive without proper lubricant in the T amp D a very unpleasant thing will hap pen The transmission will fOWl at you and the differentia will huml And once they start theyll never stop til you put in new expensive gears

So start now to have your Union Minute Mencheckyour transmission and differenshytial for you Theyll keep

a~curate records of when the service Is due and notify you to come In But-dont take chance All you get Is a noisy carl

1942 Washington State Football Schedule

Sept 26 Stanford T bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull Palo Alto Oct 3 OREGON Pullman

(Homecoming) Oct 10 MONTANA _ Pullman

(Dads Day) Oct 17 U S C Los Angeles Oct 24 O S C Portland Oct 31 Open Nov 7 Michigan State Spokane Nov 14 Idaho Tmiddotmiddotmiddot bullbullbullbull bull bullbullbullbull bull bullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull Moscow Nov 21 2nd Air Force Spokane Nov 28 Washington Seattle Dec 5 Texas A amp M San Antonio

FRESHMAN SCHEDULE Oct 31 Eastern Washington

College of Education~Pullman Nov 6 Idaho _ Moscow Nov 14 Washington Pullman

For tickets or information write or call OFFICE OF THE GRADUATE

MANAGER State College of Washington

Pullman Washington Telephone 1281

TICKET PRICES

HOMECOMING GAME

Goal to Goal $150

End Zone T 90

High School 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

DADS DAY

Goal to Goal $115

End Zone middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot T 75

High School _ 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

~iJkf

Page 2: ~T rllJJlJll1J P!lWW!lW

To the Class of 42 This column Is dedicated to last years gradushy

ates Its length and content will depend upon the newsnotes received by the Aluunl Ollice This Is yours Class of 42 contribute to It often

Ted Birchill ~rites that he is awaiting his caII from the army at Govan Washshyington Headley Brown is in the navy He can be reached at Box 265 Route 2

Santa Cruz California John Wm Brownell is living at E 623 Bridgeport Avenue in Spokane where he is working as an electrical engineer Lt Jerry D Clarke is at Fort Francis E Warren 2 M C Rep Tr Center Wyoming Doroshythy A Colpitts is working as a secretary in Seattle 4733 - 17th N E wiII reach her Lloyd Cook has accepted a position as coordinator of Distributive Education in the Tucson School system Hes living at 518 East Third Tucson Arizona

Gordon G Dewey is a registered pharshymacist at Sedro-WooIIey George Holte takes first prize for having the longest title Here it is Assistant personnel clerk in the regional headquarters of the office for Emergency Management in Seattle He reports that a local Tri-DeIt is taking up his evenings while he waits for the army George is living at 4510 shy21 Avenue N E Bernice O Crawford has a feIIowship at CorneIl University where she wiII teach child welfare and home economics Roberta Fullmer is teaching home economics general science and girls PE at Granger

The engagement of Ellen Dawson to Kendry Gimlin ex40 was announced this summer EIIen plans on teaching vocational home economics at Tieton for one year before taking the second ring Wilton Colyer is teaching industrial arts at Kenewick Carroll Tretner the beaushytiful blonde Tri-Delt wiII be music supshyervisor at Cashmere this year The edu shycational staff at Thorp Washington claims Paul E Gronemeier who wiII be in charge of the band glee club typing

and social science

Daniel P Smith informed us that he is working in a dairy pasteurizing plant and is living at Route 2 Box 210 Kent Washington Lily K Olsen is a dietitian interne and is living at 44 West Cedar Street Boston Massachusetts Margaret Girvin is employed in the promotion deshypartment of the Seattle times She is livshying at 4529 - 17 N E Seattle William S Yorozu is a landscape designer aHd contractor in Spokane W 240Y Main Street wiII reach him Willarel Zellmer has gone into Government Service Work

7fte WaShin9ton ~tate

alumni Powwow

Volume XXXI Number 7 September 1942

Joe F Caraher 35 Secretary Edna M Simmons 43 Editor

SEPTEMBER CONTENTS

bull To the Class of 42 - 2

bull Homecoming Plans and Football Outlook - 3

bull Letters from Alumni - 4

bull Campus Hits and Misses - 5

bull Cougars in the Service - 6

bull From Hotel Management to Quarter Masters Corp - 7

bull Lost Alumni Lists - 8-9

bull In This Alumni W orId 10-11

w S C ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OFFICERS 1942-43

Thad Byrne 25 Spokane C L Hix 09 PuIIman President Treasurer

M R Ebner 27 PuIIman Joe Caraher 35 Seattle First Vice President Executive Secretary

Helen Dare 37 Spokane Edna M Simmons 43 Pullman Second Vice President Asst Executive Secretary

Directors -at- Large Conrad Kromm 25 Aberdeen Fred Schroeder 29 Portland

Ed Erickson 40 Seattle Fred TaIley 17 Spokane Virginia Shaw 23 Pullman

Athletic Council Asa V Clark 16 PuIlman Milton Martin 26 Clarkston

Earl V Foster 23 PuIIman

Executive Committee Thad Byrne 25 Spokane Eri B Parker 18 PulIman

Amy LeweIlen 17 PuIlman H M Chambers 13 PuIIman Bud Matsen 43 Goldendale

The Washington State Alumni Powwow published monthly except In July and August Established In 1910 the magazine Is a digest of news devoted to the State College of Washington and Its alumnl The magazine Is published by the Alumni Association of the State College of Washington Pullman Washington Subscription price Is $150 per year Entered as second class matter June 19 1919 at the postofflce Pullman Washngton under act of Congress March 3 1879 Address all communications concerning the magazine to Room 211 Administration buIlding Pullman Washington Nashytional advertising representative The Graduate Group 30 Rockefeller Plaza New York City Member American Alumni Council

POWWOW September 1941 2

Homecoming Plans and Football Outlook Washington State alumni are getting

all primed for one of the most historishycal returns to their Alma Mater which they have ever planned Everything bears out the historical feature of this Homecoming game with Oregon on Saturday October 3

Many graduates and former stushydents are scheduling their trips so as to be in Pullman for the big noise parade and rally Friday evening This pre-game demonstration is always one of the most colorful features of a Washington State Homecoming

Alumni will register at the Alumni Office 211 Administration Building starting at three oclock Friday aftershynoon and on Saturday registration headquarters will be at the Washingshyton Hotel the official alumni headshyquarters for the 1942 Homecoming At both of these places alumni may purchase tickets to the annual Homeshycoming dance which will be held Satshyurday evening

The luncheon which is usually held for alumni at Homecoming will not be held this year Because of the uncershytainty in the number of returning alumni everyone thought it would be better to let the luncheon go for this year But we want every alumnus and friend to feel that the Washington Hotel is the greeting and visiting place for the weekend

The game needs no advertising as all Homecoming games are peppy thrillshying and the crowds go wild After the alumni and visitors have recovered their voices if that is possible and have found a snack to eat at the Hotel after the game they will be honored at the annual Homecoming dance in the Mens and Womens Gymnasiums

Homecomings at Vrashington State date from 1913 when Graduate Manshyager John Jones instituted the middotidea They have always been one of the colshyorful highlights of the college year the one time when the boys and girls of way back when once more go collegiate And if you dont think they really go collegiate just fill your car to capacity to save on gas and tires

powwow Seplember 1841

and drop down to Pullman Saturday October 3 and check up for yourself

Arthur (Spud) Carpenter 31 has been appointed Alumni Big Chief for the Homecoming festivities His outstretched hand will help you over the Welcome mat thats always out at the W S C campus

Heres the tentative program which has been made out so far

FRIDAY OCTOBER 2

3 00 PM Registration Alumni Ofshyfice Ad Bldg

6 00 PM Open House conducted by group houses and dormishytories

7 30 PM Noise Parade Campus and through Group House Disshytrict

800 PM Homecoming Pep Rally

SATURDAY OCTOBER 3

800 AM Alumni Association Board of D ire c tor s meeting Washington Hotel

9 00 AM Reg i s t rat i on begins at Washington Hotel

200 PMOregon vs Washington State Rogers Field

4 30 PM Get-together for Alumni and Friends at the Cougar Roundtable Club ( over Strupplers)

Continuation of Registrashytion at Hotel and Cougar Roundtable Club

900 PM Homecoming Dance sponshysored by ASSCW

Sounds like fun doesnt it If you dont think so come on over and weII prove it to you

~

Grid Outlook Bright -- IF w s C Expects Football Talent To

Rate High Hollingberys 17th Season

With the same problem of if faced by all other colleges Vl ashingshyton State looks to the 1942 football season and sees rays of sunshine Hottest team of the Coast at the end of last season the Pullman club holds excellent prospects for the coming campaign providing the material reshyturns to school It will be likely that some of the expected talent will be missing as a result of war service and Defense jobs but the same can be apshyplied to the opposition so Washington State should be no worse off in comshyparison

Lost Nine Veterans From the 1941 W S C team which

defeated the Coast and Rose Bowl champions of Oregon State along with the defending champs of Stanford and Oregon California Idaho and Gonzaga nine veterans including six starters have been lost by graduation They are Joe Beckman and Jim W ooddy tackles Stan Doepke and Stan Zemny guards Dale Gentry Herb Godfrey and Fred Spiegelberg ends and Bill Sewell and Felix Fletshycher halfbacks

Three lettermen eligible for the 1942 season have joined the service with others likely to go Bill Holmes slated for starting right half Eddie Pillings a fleet halfback and Joe Hemel veshyeran end are already in uniform

Stalwarts of the 1941 team who are on the faIl roster are BiIl Remington

(Continued on Page Seven)

3

LETTERS FROM ALUMNI

Mary Frances Dawson

Mary Frances Dawson 21 went to Egypt in the autumn of 1922 as a misshysionarY under the United Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions and has been there in Cairo since then with the excepshytion of two furlough years spent at PuIlshyman Miss Dawson returned to the United States last winter and the foIlowshying is a letter she wrote teIling of her experiences on her trip home

This is to give you notice that my address has been changed from Cairo Egypt to 112 North Fifth Avenue Yakishyma Washington

In May (1941) I received a letter from the Alumni Office which had been writshyten in January At the time it arrived I was in the hospital and very shortly after that I packed up to come home After waiting more than a month we were on our way A party of thirty missionaries from Cairo and about sixty from Amerishycan University of Beirut Syria travelled together Half of the number were childshyren under sixteen We went by one of His Majestys troopships (formerly the Aquatania) from Suez sailing July 30th to Sydney Australia twenty-three days which was very good time We were two days in Colombo where we lost the most of our traveIling companions who were something more than a thousand Italian prisoners-of-war Our next stoR was Freshyman tIe Australia but as our ship anchshyored outside the harbor and it was stormy we were not allowed off the boat

After two days there we went on to Sydney going south of Tasmania That bit was rather cold as we were rather far south and it was the winter time down yonder down under perhaps I should say We chafed a bit at having to stay in Sydney for four weeks but it was a pleasant place to be delayed The Ausshytralians were most friendly and kind Sydney is more like an American city than any other I have ever visited The secretary of the Australian-American Coshyoperation Movement was most kind and did a great deal for us I had several very interesting visits in some of the Domestic Science High Schools Australia is a big sparsely populated country

From Sydney we came on the Monshyterey of the Matson Line eighteen days to San Francisco The time was broken up with an overnight stop about twentyshysix hours at Auckland New Zealand and stops of several hours at Suva Fiji Pago Pago American Samoa Honulu and Los Angeles On this boat there were about two hundred and fifty civilian passengers and six hundred Australian and New Zealander airmen some ready to go on active service and the larger number to be trained some place in America We arrived in San Francisco on October 7th

The entire journey was made without mishaps of any kind On the troopship we were not as comfortable as on the Monterey but we really could not comshyplain as we were better off than we had thought we might be from stories we had heard of others who had travelIed from the Middle East The ship was steady going food was adequate The first two or three days in the Red Sea were hot I hope that I will never be hotter The ship traveIled under complete blackshyout AI1 windows and portholes were closed before sunset and kept that way tiII daylight the next morning This was not only a precaution against light showshying but also a safeguard against the ship so rapidly fiIling with water should she be struck We kept our life preservers in a place easily gotten and things laid by just in case-but some of us had been doing that in Cairo that is keeping things laid by in case of an air raid As to whether we ~ere near a raider at any time I do not know Before we reached Colombo we had had boat drilIs and had been given instructions After we left Colombo the Captain calIed us alI in and said that while he did not want to frightshyen us he wanted us to realize that we were in very dangerous waters and he went on emphasizing instructions already given us and giving rather more explicit ones He also said that when the signal

sounded again it would be the real thing (we had had three drils before this) but it did not sound again

Up until the time I left Cairo had had no bombs within the city but there had been a good many alerts and we at the American Mission ColIege for Girls had made a good many trips to the air raid shelter Two nights before I left the siren went about two am We had all gone over to the shelter which is in a building adjoining our dormitory I went back into the main building to check up when I saw one plane and saw two flares dropped There was a good deal of anti-aircraft fire That night there were said to have been five enemy planes over the city A little later Cairo did suffer some from bombing but I have not heard to what extent

But in spite of what is going on there people go on living in much the same routine There is not as much social life partly because of blackout conditions The past year the school with which I am connected had the largest enrolIment it had ever had We are having difficulty in getting teachers as we have always carried a number of American teachers

Since beginning this letter I hear that Dr Bryan has passed away A wonderful man he was and the Colege and State owe him much

Sincerely

Signed Mary Frances Dawson 21

Captain Langley (Continued on Page Eleven)

POWWOW Seplember ltf 4

CAMPUS HITS AND MISSES The American Alumni Council of

which the WSC Alumni Association is a member has proven its worth once again The AAC has just completed an arrangement with the War Departshyment whereby all their members will receive the name and address of every alumnus of their school who goes into the army-and within one week of his induction

~ The new Army Civilian Pilot Trainshy

ing Course is going forward with flyshying colors The 20 trainees are on the job 12 hours a day and have few idle minutes according to Prof Robert S Neilson military instructor athletic director and coordinator The daily schedule begins with calisthenics at 5 30 followed by flight training at the airport during the mori-ting Military drill and classroom instruction occushypy the afternoon and early evening The men now in training will complete their elementary work in eight weeks and then advance to secondary trainshying so that a new group can be started

~ The seven-semester reign as scholarshy

ship queens of the Washington State campus has ended for Kappa Alpha Theta national sorority when they were forced into second place by Alshypha Gamma Delta national sorority in the group scholastic standings for the spring semester announces Regisshytrar Frank T Barnard In third place is Maple Cottage trailed by Pi Beta Phi national sorority only 01 of a point below

Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity headed the mens group for the fourth consecutive time with an average of 8634 foIlowed by Acacia fraternity and Waller Hall

~ Three promotions have been made

on the ROTC staff at WSC Captain Howard H House has been promoted to the rank of major First Lieutenshyants George L Converse and Jerry D Naimy have gone one step up and are now wearing captains bars

powwow September 1841

Eleven different languages are the achievement of the nine soldiers now studying the Japanese language under the direction of Rev~rend John Cobb Spokane pastor Their classes are being held in CoIlege Hall Besides their language accomplishments which include fluent use of Hebrew Greek Sioux Indian Latin Portugese and Armenian as well as French Spanish Italian German and Polish these men may boast of representing almost every section of the United States They came from Massachusetts N~w York Wisconsin Illinois Kentucky Florida Texas South Dakota and Washington

Lt Howard Greer The Navy has called Lt Greer from his Publicity Directors desk in the Graduate Managers Office He is now in Rhode Island

The occupations of these men before they started military service indicate that there is much versatility among army men Ten weeks ago one of them was a footbaIl and basketball

coach and a professional boxer anshyother was a night club operator before he volunteered his services in May The others were in occupations such as operator of a soap business a deshypartment of health laboratory technishycian an accountant an assistant to a museum director and middot a student at Hamilton College

The Pullman-WSC stocking drive was a great success The silk hose will be sent to the Orient by the American Bureau for Medical Aid to China There they will be used as bandages for injured Chinese soldiers in the Asiatic war zones Mrs Robert S Neilson lead among individual conshytributors as she offered 56 stockings to the drive

~ The Phi Kappa Alpha house won

the $250 prize offered to the group on the campus for the best essay on The Use of Washington Lumber Prodshyucts The West Coast Lumbermans Association sponsored the contest on both this campus and the University of Washington campus Raymond Ellis and Carl Henry wrote the essay that won the prize on this campus

Leroy Bradbury ASSCW President

ASSCW Loses Officers Presidentshyelect Marvin Gilberg (Greek) has reshysigned both the ASSCW presidency and the co-captaincy of the basketball team to enter University of California Dental School in San Francisco Wilshyma Richardson (Independent) camshypus beauty was elected ASSCW Secshyretary but writes she wont be on the campus this year either The engageshyment of these two was announced this summer Could be somethings a going on but we wouldnt be a knowing shyyet

Bruce Bruchler who was elected Independent Junior Man on the Board of Control writes that he is now servshying Uncle Sam at Fort Douglas Utah so wont be back

Leroy Bradbury (Independent) will step up from the Vice-Presidents chair to take the reigns of the Associshyated Students this fall His first job will be to fill the other vacancies in his Board of Control

5

COUGARS IN THE SERVICE Three Washington State College alumshy

ni have been advanced to the rank of brigadier general it was announced by the war department

They are Lowell W Brooks 17 proshymoted from colonel infantry July 31 1942 Joseph L Philips 14 promoted from colonel cavalry July 28 1942 now assigned to army group Washington DC and S Lusker McCroskey 16 proshymoted from colonel coast artillery corps June 24 1942

Also listed by the department was a partial list containing names of seven WSC alumni who are now colonels and three who are lieutenant colonels in the United States service

Those listed as colonels were Arthur O Walsh 17 finance department (see write-up in June POWWOW) R H Back 18 infantry M V Fortier 16 ordinance department R M ODay 15 infantry now in the Pacific theater of war Harold G Holt 15 cavalry on duty with armored division (see write-up in June POWWOW) and William A Wapshypenstein 20 infantry who is on duty at a foreign station

The Lieutenant colonels were Hubert S Miller 21 corps of engineers Stanley M Nevin 25 veterinary corps now on duty at a foreign station and Cal Phillips 33 who is post adjutant at Randolph Field Texas and who formerly was WSC Alumni Secretary

Washington State College students who were graduated in class 42-F from Enid Army Flying School Oklahoma were Jack E Turner (1936-41) and Clark O Cordill (1935-40) Aviation Cadet Turshyner went to the Air Corps Advanced Flyshying School Lake Charles La and Aviashytion Cadet Cordill to the Air Corps Advanced Flying School Mission Texas Lt Bill Ambrosius 40 has been in the Phillipines and Java flying bombers He is now in Australia where he is a Finance Officer Censor Officer and Squadron Adjutant Ed Zydowsky freshman footshyball and baseball player in 1937 is in the army at Camp Grant Illinois playing on the baseball team In a game versus the Chanute Field baseball team the other day Ed hit one of the longest home runs ever seen in those parts

The promotion of Woodson Bennett 38 from the rank of First Lieutenant to that of Captain in the Medical Corps United States Army was announced by headquarters of the Medical Field Service School Carlisle Barracks Pa where Captain Bennett is an instructor in the Officer Candidate School Staff Sergeant

Howard R Melvin Jr 37 has been transferred to the Army Air Forces new Basic Flying School near Marana Arishyzona a desert villag~ some thirty miles from Tucson Prior to his induction into the Army Sgt Melvin was an accountant associated with the New York office of Price Waterhouse amp Co He is still enshygaged in accounting activities being now the assistant to the Finance Officer at themiddot Marana base Capt D R Morgan 30 is with General McArthur and his troops in Australia

Names that yesterday made headlines on local sports pages are today laboring in patriotic anonymity to impart toughshyening physical training to the Army flyshyers of tomorrow On the roster of physhysical middot training instructors in the West Coast Army Air Forces Training Center Santa Ana California are men who made sports history Three former WSCers arc John Klumb 39 Domonic George 35 and Joseph J Koegler 29

Second Lieutenant Louis 1 Miller 38 to 41 was commissioned as an officer in the U S Army Air Force at the Lubbock Army Flying School Lubbock Texas on July 3 1942 After a period of primary training at Pine Bluff Arkansas Lt Milshyler went to Perrin Field Texas for basic instruction At the Lubbock Army Flying School one of the newest and biggest in Americas victory program his training was in the twin-engine bomber type of aircraft Captain and Mrs Glen K Smith 36 are now at Fort Sam Houston Texas where Captain Smith is in the Medical Department of the Service School at the Station Hospital He writes that he had a letter from Ed Goldsworthy 36 inshyforming him that Ed and Oscar Schoff had been promoted to the grade of captain and are on duty in Puerto Rico

From the rank of Second Lieutenant to Captain in six months is the jump that Charles W Hoffman 41 took He reshyceived his wings and was commissioned as 2nd Lt on December 13 1941 and received his Captaincy in June 1942 Neil Seehom 40 to 42 has gone to New London Conn to attend the coast guard academy there He gained his place by passing competitive examinations He was secretary of the Intercollegiate Knights in his sophomore year at college

WSC WOMEN PLAY THEIR PART

Lois E Hamilton 31 has been ordershyed to San Francisco from where she will leave for forei gn duty as Head Dietitian in the U S Army Her orders were to

take enough clothing for three years Dorothy Bussard 34 is in Des Moines Iowa as part of Washingtons contingent of 46 to receive training in the Womens Army Auxiliary Corps

Judith McWhorter 39 Yakima and Janet Oswalt 42 Wilbur are new memshybers of the Women Appointed for Volunshyteer Emergency Service-WAVES-and will begin training at Smith college Northampton Mass

Graduating with the first WAAC class at Fort Des Moines was Dorothy McshyLellan Sunnyside 1939 business adminisshytration graduate

Helen E Dare 37 Second Vice Presishydent of the W S C Alumni Association wrote on August 18

I have accepted a position as personshynel technician with the Air Force Comshymand which will keep me traveling throughout the United States I am sorry to have to give up my new position in the Alumni Association but perhaps I can sell the Cougars There are only 60 of these trained technicians in the counshytry and a group of us (5) ar e the first girls to be accepted for the position so we are thrilled about it all and are deshytermined to do a good job

~

How About A Letter When Rodney Bittner 41 sent in his

$150 for another years subscription to the POWWOW he sent this note along

Just thought I would take time out between Jap bombs to write a few lines My folks forward the magazine to me and I do enjoy it (when possible to get our mail)

Would it be possible to put a bit in it asking any of myoid friends (if any) to drop a line What mail we sailors receive is greatly appreciated I am doing medical work on board ship and at times am very busy

On April 18 1942 I received commisshysion in Naval Reserve as an Ensign Since first of 1941 have been on active duty in Navy in Medical Corp and still am Also went through the December 7 1941 blitz at Pearl Harbor and other naval battles Hope to be in Naval Reshysearch Lab before the year is over Would appreciate hearing from anybodY who remembers me Address is USS MEDUSA c-o Fleet Postmaster San Francisco California or home address is 5049 South Thompson Tacoma Washshyington

POWWOW September 184 6

From Hotel Manageshyment To Quarter Masters Corps

By Shirley Ingram

Quarter Masters Corps-the subsist shyence division and commissary work of the army and navy finds priority value in college students trained in Hotel Adshymanagement says Lieut Col William L Morrison acting commandant Washshyington State College Military Science and Tactics

What mans army or navy would not find a growing need for men trained in the principfes of food selection and prepshyaration to manage commissary units The hotel field has long ranked near the top in big business but today the need for college trained men is causing unshyprecedented growth

With roots firmly fixed in chemical scishyence and nutritional knowledge and with practical work done in the large quantity kitchens of the State College food unitsshythe butcher shop and the bakeshop at the Commons-with all this background and advanced ROTC training these stushydents will find the challenging appetites of soldiers in the line of duty

During the school year they are given experience in the Hotel Washington in Pullman where they work in many capashycities-practicing the theory of classshyrooms-ranging from bus boys to assist shyant chefs to desk clerks

In addition to fifteen major home ecoshynomics courses Hotel Administration students take a number of courses in the school of business administration to beshycome acquainted with methods of acshycounting Courses in economics money and banking business finance advertisshying business law and labor problems give them an additional background for their work and for handling Uncle Sams finances Other courses demandshying their complete knowledge are psyshychology aFchitecture plumbing and enshygineering personnel management and equipment engineering

Twelve outstanding hotel men of the Northwest have been selected as an adshyvisory committee to aid and direct in the

planning of the Hotel Administration course Mr Walter CHst Culmstock Arms Mr James A McCluskey Davenshyport Hotel and Mr Sam Jordon Sposhykane Mr Harry Gowman Gowman Hotel Mr Frank Hull Olympia Hotel Mr Harold Dupar and Mr Frank W Thurston New Washington Hotel Mr A J Barash Secretary of the Washingshyton State Hotel Association Seattle Mr Thad Pierce Hotel Olympia Olympia Mr Earl McInnes Hotel MultnomahbullPOWWOW September lUI

Portland Mr Guy Toombes Hotel Utah Salt Lake City and Mr Carl Morck Morck Hotel Aberdeen compose the committee

Spokane serves as the laboratory for field trips that are taken to give the stushydents first hand knowledge of hotels Affiliated with the Spokane Chapter No 8 of Hotel 6reeters of America a WSC Greeters Club has been formed by Hotel students

In cooperation with the Spokane chaRshyter speakers are brought to the college at various times to discuss present probshylems in the hotel field A $100 scholarshyship is awarded each year to an outshystanding junior by the Spokane Hotel Greeters

The following partial roster of gradushyates of the Hotel Administration course of the State College shows their place in the United States Army and Navy-Capshytain Ward Walker Recreation Center Fort Lewis Ensign Robert H Hoffman U S Navy Air Force Washington DC First Lt Earl Redlin Infantry Camp Roberts Calif First Lt Harry Lane Army Quartermaster Corps Riverside Calif Second Lt Deane Cooper Officer Sale School Air Corps Flying School Victorville Calif Maurice Youngs Air Corps Flying School Stockton Calif

Indeed the 1942 hotel-military students are finding a new line of defense and are being geared in an all out effort to do their part in the subsistence dishyvision

~ HOMECOMING 1941

Board of Directors Meetinit

Alumni registering

Football Outlook (Continued Irom Page Three)

center Bill Ward left guard Nick Susoeff right end Jay Stoves left halfback Fred Small quarter and Bob Kennedy fullback all of whom did outstanding work last autumn George Dyson and Jim Wright a pair of 225-pounders who saw considerashyble action as sophomores last year are the probable starters at tackle

Renfro Will Return

Dick Renfro boxcar back who stayed out of college last year after two seasons of fine varsity service is due to be back and will be assigned to the blocking quarterback post Tom Brannigan stocky guard of the last two years was moved to quarter durshying spring practice and is expected to remain there

Frank Akins hard-running twoshyyear veteran halfback who was out of school last year will be back and will probably see duty at right half instead of left Earl Brenneis who broke in as a sophomore last fall will also be at right half Frank Londos husky fuIIshyback vet will bolster the backfield

Other lettermen on the list include Buster Hollingbery center Rod Giske and Gene Arger guards Mel Holben and Bill Gustafson tackles Max Dodge end and Jim Boyle quartershyback

Good Soph Prospects

Up from last years freshmen Jelly Anderson end Harry Planck guard and Jim Thompson halfback are topshynotch varsity prospects Marv Walker junior college transfer is a capable performer at halfback while Gene Evans and Benton Bangs both backs Were reserves last year

Other sophomore candidates include Vern Oliver center Tom Parry and John Godfrey guards Rufus Boldshyman and Les Metzger tackles Ralph Thompson George Kitna and Wallace Kramer ends and Ron Waggoner fullback

~ Plan now to see the Cougars in action

on Homecoming October 3

7

NEEDED Addresses For These Missing Washington Staters

A constant effort is being made to keep track of State College alumni but despite the effort it becomes a real task to know just where everyone is located During the past year many lost alumni have been founel but others have dropped out of sight and the list remains about the same

We need your help I Check over the alumni listed in both the Long Lost and Newly Lost lists and let Us know if you have any addresses or information which would lead to addresses of these people You will find a form for returning this information on the next page Thank you

Newly Lost 1910 Imus Clifford C 1914 Foster Dean Edward 1916 Hart Stadden S 1917 Griffith Mrs George

(Irene Palmer) 1918 Goertzen Mrs J A

(Alma Anderson) Homme Olav H 19 19 Rees Florence M Cutler Clarence W 1920 Brooks Mrs Juanita Ridenaur Horace Stam Dr -Edward L 192 3 Hollingsworth Walter M 192 4 Greenberg Nathan Lavin William A Williams Earl A bull Wooddy Mrs Edith L 192 5 Casey Sister Maureen Gage Kenneth McKillip William A Vincent Mrs Walter E

(Jennie Secrest) 1926 Wilfong Mrs J L

(Gladys Gue) 192 7 Mueller Vivian 1 Olson Emanuel Wilson Harry K 1928 Graham Lola Vivien Johnson Kenneth R Miller William A 1929 Yuni Richard V 1930 Osterman Mrs Leo

(Ana N egoescu) Pittman Chester Allen Swartz Helen Jane 1931 Rowland Katharine 1932 Guisleman George V Oien Gustav T middot Pohlman H Kingsley 1933 Henderson Earl L Van Doren Winifred M 1934 Jackson Virgil M Matthews John S Richey Loran P Wilson William F 1936 Agee James R Stewart Lorne J W Talcott Robert Van Patten

8

1937 Marlatt Leigh R 1938 McCabe Mrs Burton

(Helen Wersen) Siepman Richard D 1939 Tomita Junichi 1940 Ross Earle R 1941 Atkin Shirlen E Byers Doris V Fernandez Cipriana C Zier Ruth Lillian 1942 Ashton Willard H Hoop Jay Dee Jasper Dr Donald E Robinson LeRoy D

Long Lost 1899 Larkin Charles T 1900 Anderson John Frank Brown Peter

1903 Wallis William Alden 1~04 Carter Emily Barker Foster Sidney F 1906 McKenzie Frank William 1907 Andrews Mrs Maude C Bryant Roy E Grice Mrs Otto (Florence

Knepper) 1908 Baddeley Dr Joseph Clarence Burg Mrs Walter A (Myrtle

Boyles) Simmons John Leslie Wilson Frank E Woods Tony W

(f~fi Clarence E Kelly Edna Rosene Laird Marple Everett Miller Claude A Smith Virgil Rodney Talbot Charles William 19 10 Bobeau Lucius McClellan Limon Gregorio ~II Couch Dr Otto Justin Maeda Teruzo Marston William Ray Rogers Jessie B Strickler Clair H 1912 Reeder George Kingsburg Sands Olea M Warwick Mrs Preston (Mary

Mann) 1913 Craner Albert E Creveling Alfred Benjamin Gaddis Dee Kirsch Karl

Knapp Harold Stanford Leavitt Clarence Ashton 1914 Almen Herman Victor Long Delbert C Meyer Henry William Newman Mrs Pauline Davis

(Pauline Davis) Rodgers Roliert Julius Spiers Archibald L C Wilson Philip Guy 191 5 Brown Stonewall Koppen Walter J McCormick Francis Howard Ney John Henry Platt Mrs Philip S Anette

Nicholl) Puckett Thomas C Stendquist Lender L 1916 Batts Bertha A McLaughlin George Swanson Swen Arthur Van Horn Bower 1917 Baker Adolph Irvin Greene Mrs W H C (Chrismiddot

tine M Wood)Humphrey Homer W Jeffrey Blanche C Luce Dr Harry C Miller Aubrey C Richardson Elizabeth Roach Mrs C M (Etl)a Batts)Russell Fred Lawrence Sato Jachi Sato Shinijiro Todd Paul Edward 19 1 8 Boyle Margaret Croonquistz Mrs Hugh A

(Helen T Holroyd)Ewing Clarence Charles Krafft E Gertrude Sisseau Mrs Fred G (Ora

Mabel Hickman)Smith Mrs Charlotte Robinson Traeger LeRoy Edwin

1919 Beck Esther LydiaJudges Bertha rhistlewaite Garnet VirgilWhitford Richard W

1920 Brett Matie DorothyBrooks Bert Edgar Mary Charlotte Henderson Winfield Lester Martin Harrison G McAninch Mrs Marion E

(Evelyn N Bradbury)Moore Gladys B Riviere Mrs Frank (Suzanne

M Moinard)Sera Sei Ropion Yvonne GeorgetteRitchie Helen Mae Seyer Mary Emily Shroll Walter Scott Shaw Robert L Stam Dr Edward Lockwood Stanton Will ClydeTainaka Ben Katsumi Valdivieso Fausto Wright Geraldine Ziegler Adolph

1921 Bartruff John A Black Mrs Van Nest (Mry

Todd Hodges) Collins Homer Arthur Fitch Mrs Clara

(Clara Hefty) Holmes Edna Alice Isamu Inouye Kruger John Henry Lyse Alvin Theodore Lytle Nelson Edwin Medby Arthur Moodhe David Herbert Muir Esther Davidson Myers Earl H Newland Mrs Ruth H

(Charles J) Rinehart John Marshall Street Mrs Julian

(Marguerite Skibeness) Taggert David Vander Heyden Joseph Wm M Watzek Peter Whitman Mrs Lorna Longwell 1922 Belknap Clifford Vernon Carr Mildred Irene Chamberlain Lowell Colby Phillip Henry Fox Heggmaier Caroline

Kee Mrs W H (Loree Whitney)

Patrick James G Pohl Clara Mildred Robin Lyla Josephine Watson James Winkler Stanley C 192 3 Bessette Josephine A Byrnes Eleanor Dunegan Irvin Ferguson Dewitt Talmage French Olive Bell Hansen Arthur Caleb Ideno Harry H Ishiyama Eiitsu Kidnay Katherine Page Carroll Gordon Taylor Harry Albert Zimmerman Ernest Theodore 1924 Barnes Ralph Howard Carlile Dallas Elijah Howard Henry R Johnson Merrit H Liu Min Chang Messenger William P Reese Chester G Simmons Mrs Estella J Snodgrass Milton Dean Steiner Marie Anne TeeGarden Mrs Lewis

(Alice Prindle) Westbrook John Lewis

192 5 Andes Mrs James O

(Esther Crawford) Campbell John Gordon Chandler Norman Edwards Ruth Harbeck Glenn C Hibbard Lorin G Hinton Paul Johnson Askel Herbert Kerr H Catherine Moore Margaret Newton George A Skinner Mrs Robert

(Eva Nordin) Smith Edward N White Mary Anieta Yasuda Masao

1926 Ballantyne Helen Man Coberly Dwight Crane Esther Lenore Davenport Earle Glenn Fisher William Alonzo Gillis Ewen Hess Mildred Eula Johnson Dr Walford Joseph Kreider Anna C Lapp Paul Alfred McIntire Aileen Olive Naggy Steve Norton Alice Augusta Owen Roy Martin Walker Clarence Wright Walton Edward Deane Mamie Engstrom Alva Carl Gudger Bessie Leona Johnson Frank J Largent Harry E Logan Mrs Hugh L

(Ethel Dora Keevy) McGucken Edward G Nakagawa Taniji Harry Nelson James Ade Okui James Jito Purnell Orien Virgil Sievers Mrs George

(Nelle V Jones) Smith David J Westbrook Mrs Jane Howe Worlds Clarence H

1928 Bennett Lawrence M Kowal Joe Lee Chite Meeker Herbert L Olson Esther Louise Taylor James Eldon Wilkie Mildred LaVelle

1929 Aquino Antonio Quesada Connolly Pat Wlliam Dial Mabel Jacobson Keener John Burton Jr Lester Viola G McFarland Mrs Marion Bush Lew Mi Ryan Mrs William C

(Maxine Damrell) Scranton Idol N Stevenson Robert S VanBossche Leonard

lowwow September 1141

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbull bullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1930 Allison James Frank Bailey Mrs Lyman N

(Helen Bolitho)Fang Tsung Han Donald Lewis Fox Hennessy Mary Lemmia Lavett AntollY Eustace Long F Cecil Olson Ruth Wilamena Platter John Laurence Ralph Harry Robert Roberts Mary Elizabeth Schirmer Evalyne Carolyn Steelman Julien Randolph Veldee Mrs R Marie

1931 Abey Lester E Chun William B Fuller David Thomas Fulmer Fred Roy McCall Harriett Irene Mahoney Alice Madelon Nelson M Maxine Schimelpfenig Clyde F Wilson James Walker

1932 Braganza Bonifacio B Carlson Oscar Theodore Gage Frank Henry Kaylor Raymond Doyle Meyers Merton Isabelle Micu Genenato Realin Miyota Nathaniel Susumu Noel James P Nyuha Bert K Padua Andrew M Suguitan Eustaquio Abella

1933 Corner Harold A Howland Alice Katherine Imes Eva Carol Layos Robert D Miller Monroe Eugene Ysui Yung Chi Young JeChun

1934 ~Balatero Jose Ancheta Galbraith Robert Donald ~ Herren Mary Peyton Hsu Pin Ling ~ Hytpwitz Lawrence David Leonard James Thomas ~ Little Myrtle Louise Ramos Inocencio Raguine ~ Scott Edward Rodney ~1935 ~ Dunbar Alver Herrold Dwight Elmer Jones Del E Lundberg Bert OmiddotShea Bill S Pontesso Leonard Arthur Stewart Daniel R Stewart Everett Earle Lyle E Tompkins

1936 Burns David Robert Carter Daniel Melvin Clnk Herbert Edward Elson Miss Vinnie Haynes Laird H Jewell Charles Arthur Rhine Duhois Clarence

1937 Holmes Richard Arthur Hougen Esther Larson Joseph B Snodgrass Jack H

1938 Akers Margaret M Dawley Muriel E Jones Juanita Sexton Ormsbee Richard Armstrong Smith Harold Gus Tamura Yoshio

1939 Black Richard Clark Burton Sydney Leonard Stubbs James W Nelson Howard Edmond Palafox Anastacio Laida Wooten Clyde Curtis

94 Cook Albert Thomas Jessup Ellen Clara

POWWOW September 1941

The LOST Are Found Alumni Office 211 Adminstration Building Pullman Washington

Gentlement Id like to report the following round-up of alumni on your Lost list

(signed) Name __

Address

Name Class

Address __ _ _ _

Lead to gt[ address __

Narne _ Class _

Address _ - - ____

Lead to get address ~~____

Name _ Class ___

Address ______

Lead to get address - - - -__

Narne _ Class _

Address

Lead to get address ~-

s~- _- Class __

Lead to get address ~- --- -

I Alumni Records There is increasing need for a mondeg complete record of Washington State Alumni

To this end your Alumni Office has searched all possible college records and has also received a very few personal data records from individuals This form will give your Alumni Office the essential informlltion which it needs from you Please accommoshydate us by filling it out and returning it with the halance of this page Thank you

Narne _ Class Degree _

Business firm - Position

Residence address shy

Date of birth Where - shy

Married on To yen bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Who attended (College) __ Class

Children (ages and names) ~

--------------_---------------------_-----------------------_------------------_------------------------_--___-----__shy

War record - - yen

Extra-curricular activity since leaving College (public offices clubs honors etc)

--- ------------------------------ ~__-- ----__-_ _____-__-__-_--_ ____----

_---_ _------__ ----------_--__----_______ ___--_--_-----_---____ shy

If you have not already submitted one we should like a recent photograph of yourshyself for our biographical file

9

The right minded alumnus can do much to keep the institution in a right In This Alumni Worldlight before the citizens of the state upon which it must depend for supshyport H e is in a sense its advertising agency If he gets Oltt of touch or out of sympathy with his Alma Mater she thereby suffers a great loss

-Thomas Arkle Clark Long-time Dean of Men Univ of Illinois

NEW LIFE MEMBERS JULY AND AUGUST

H H WAITE 26

BERT S NORLING 26

COL HAROLD G HOLT 15

l1R AND MRS ALLEN MANRING 32

1910 Walter E Rutherford is the owner of Rutherfords Pharmacy in Oakesdale Washington

1923 Mrs Alfred C Schy (Ora West) is living at Lamont Washington The Westss have three children Alfred Lee 6 Alan 4 and Marjorie Jane 2

1924 Mr and Mrs Dorcy D Nog1ey (Ida Hedborg) have one son born March 24 1939 They live at 684 Highland Avenue Glen Ellyn Illinois

1926 J F Gates is Property Officer and Comshypany Quarter Master at Camp Lee Vir-

How To Be A Member In Good Standing of the WSC Alumni

Association Its easy

You send cash money order or check amounting to $150 to the Alumni Office In return you receive a years subscription to the POWWOW official publication of the association printed ten times each year

Now that its on your mind why dont you - this minute - fill out the blank below and join an organization that is growing every day

Life Membership in the organization including years POWWOW $500

Name Class

Address City State

Please find $ for a years membership in the Association

Please bill me for the same amount on c and start sending POWWOW now

ginia He is an Entomologist

Mr and Mrs Harrie O Bohlke are livshying at 9547 - 24th Street N W Seattle Mr Bohlke is in the Industrial Departshyment of the Seattle Chamoer of Comshymerce From 1934 to 1941 he was the chief inspector for the Washington State Rignor Control Board and in 1939 he was in the Grand Lodge of BPOE

1927 Dr Harold Weatherman is a Pediatrician at the Rees-Stealy Clinic in San Diego California He lives at 3531 Arnold Ave

1928 James T Pringle is in the transportation Sales Department of Westinghouse Elecshytric and Manufacturing Company and lives at No 16 - 575 South Negley Aveshynue Pittsburgh Pennsylvania He and his wife (Margaret Palmer x 31) have a 20-month-old baby girl Helen

1930 Clifford E Long is in the United States

Employment Service as Manager and is ~ living at Hood River Oregon He is married and has two children In Janushyi ary 1940 he was given a medical disshy charge from the army with the rank of

Lieutenant At present he is a re-emshy_ ployment committeeman and works on the Selective Service System

Mrs Gara1d L Dixon (Helen Casey) lives at N 5111 Stone Street Bonners Ferry Idaho and has two children Carol Ann 10 and Jane Ellen 8 Mr and Mrs N Harold Squier are living at 850 Sunnyside Chicago Illinois with their nine-year-old daughter Nancy Maria Mr Squier is the training supershyvisor of the Commonwealth Edison and is acting as a teacher and worker in Civilian Defense

1931 Dr Esther M Roehr lives with her Docshytor husband at 903 E John Seattle They have two children Sandra Marie and Karen Eppa Stanley Ray is office nurse and anesthetist for Dr ] F Scott Surgeon in Yakima Washington She and her husband Dr Kenneth C Ray live at 213 N 24th Avenue Yakima Mr and Mrs Leonard W Swanson are living at Eatonville Washington The Swansons have two children Donald Alan 4 and Richard Lennart 1

1933 A Wilfred Welch is the Asst Engineer in the U S Engineer Dept at Eugene Oregon The Mr and Mrs (Verna C Robinson 32) live at 1380 Villord Street with Nancy Gayl their daughter

POWWOW September lUI 10

1934 Dr Marlowe Dittebrandt is a practicing physician in Portland Oregon She lives at the Heathman Hotel Her business adshydress is Room 212 Studio Building

1935 Alfred S Cleveland has been the Adshyministrative Assistant in the U S Deshypartment of Agriculture at Harvard Unishyversity Cambridge Mass In June howshyever he was called into active duty as a Lieutenant (JG) in the U S N R

1936 Rolf B Jorgensen is the Assistant Range Examiner of the U S Forest Service at Saint Anthony Idaho He married Doroshythy L Welch x31 in 1938 and they have one daughter almost two years old

Pauline Thomas is the P E and Health Teacher in the Seattle Public Schools and lives at 1019 Terry Avenue

1937 The chief wine chemist at the Gibson Wine Company in Fort Mitchell Kenshytucky is Wilbur Zeve1y whose address is Rivard Drive Dixie Highway

Robert E Click is Sanitarian in the Yakishyma City-County Health Dept He was treasurer of the Western Washington Dairy Technology Assn during 1941shy1942 406 South 27th Avenue Yakima Washington will reach him

~

Letters From Alums (Continued from Page Four)

Captain Claire Langley 36 sent in this letter to the alumni office recently from the Hawaiian Islands Captain Langleys address is 161st Infantry C O Service Co APO 25 coo P M San Francisco California

Pehea Oe

You see Im getting akamai Hawaiian isnt spoken much but the names are sure nani-if you say em right Its Ho no 100 100 not Hannah Loo lah That makes the kamaaina huhu and pegs you for a malihini And put a soft e on the end of Hawaii like this Hah weye e Thats no pilikia Now that youve had your language lesson Ill tell you someshything about the people and their islands The Hawaiian wahines are beautiful and their kane big and friendly And when they tell me Hele mai e ai they dont have to say that again I just answed Mahalo nui and move right in

Their best work though is Aloha

POWWOW SepCember lUI

Youll find it at the end of this letter But it means much more than just goodshybye Its Hello Love to You Good Morning How ya doing-any kind of a pleasant greeting And if a Hawaiian replies Aloha no believe it not he means Aloha yes Some newcomers get their Hawaiian all mixed up One pupule tourist wrote home that he was sitting on a lei with a lanai round his neck

Whats cookin Maybe a hukilau folshylowed by a big luau Hawaiians bake puaa with vegetables in an underground oven I ts some kaukau Your opu sure sticks out after all that fresh pineapple poi and fish-including one little feller they call humuhumunukunukuapuaa No wonder they say the language has vowel trouble at a lua a keikikane will walk right up an cocopalm in his bare feet and toss you down nuts to drink out of And then theyll shred the leaves and weave you a papale The hula dancers with pua in their hair sure go to town in fresh ti-Ieaf skirts and red muumuu They even put jitter-bugging in the shade And thats no hoopunipuni

But the deal here is surfing at Waikiki Riding a surfboard is a kick but takes practice Ill do mine in an outrigger canoe with a Hawaiian steering When he hollers Huki its lucky that old blue sea is wela for you certainly take a wetshyting as you toboggan down a huge wave Some thrill And no hele wawae back

For directions in Hawaii they tell you to go mauka or makai-thats to the mountains or toward the sea When you Go for broke its called welakahao If you cant understand all this letter look in the corner Thats a good start and when I learn some more Ill write you wikiwiki Good-bye now

Aloha nui

Signed Claire Langley

Helpful hints Pehea oe-Howre you Akamal-clever Nani-beautilul Huhu-angry Kamaalna-old timer lIaJlhini-newcomer Pilika-trouble Wahine-woman Kane-man Hele mal e ai-come In and eat Mahalo nul-thanks Pupule-looney Lei-garland Lanai-verandah Hukilau-net fishing Luau-feast Kelki-kane-boy Puaa-plg Kaukau-food Opu-stomach Papale-hat Pua-flower Muumuu-waist Hoopunlpun-lIe Huki-pull Wela-warm Hele wawae-walk Nul-big Wlklwlkl--quck

in other word Ity JOHN CLINTON

I As the His-CEE pano-Plymshy

outhandI bull grow old toshy~ gether my reshy

s12ect for the old bus inshycreases I think

when at last the war is over and new cars are once more availshyable Ill keep the H-P and have it stuffed

For example the other day one of the Union 011 engineers told me that If the speed of my enshygine were not reduced by the transmission and differential the H-P1ymouth would travel at something like 240 miles per houri Wowl

I never knew

before just tpMwhat the transshymission and _ differential ~ were for But it turns out that they tame the power generated by your engine and apply it in tableshyspoonfuls to the wheels And incidentally theyre two vital departments of your car

The transmission has something like 54 separate parts whizzing around Inside a sealed box It takes special lubricant that will withstand extreme high presshysure to lubricate that stuff 4nd If you let It go more than 5000 miles youre taking chances

Its too technical to explain in this space (even if I could do itl) but if you drive without proper lubricant in the T amp D a very unpleasant thing will hap pen The transmission will fOWl at you and the differentia will huml And once they start theyll never stop til you put in new expensive gears

So start now to have your Union Minute Mencheckyour transmission and differenshytial for you Theyll keep

a~curate records of when the service Is due and notify you to come In But-dont take chance All you get Is a noisy carl

1942 Washington State Football Schedule

Sept 26 Stanford T bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull Palo Alto Oct 3 OREGON Pullman

(Homecoming) Oct 10 MONTANA _ Pullman

(Dads Day) Oct 17 U S C Los Angeles Oct 24 O S C Portland Oct 31 Open Nov 7 Michigan State Spokane Nov 14 Idaho Tmiddotmiddotmiddot bullbullbullbull bull bullbullbullbull bull bullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull Moscow Nov 21 2nd Air Force Spokane Nov 28 Washington Seattle Dec 5 Texas A amp M San Antonio

FRESHMAN SCHEDULE Oct 31 Eastern Washington

College of Education~Pullman Nov 6 Idaho _ Moscow Nov 14 Washington Pullman

For tickets or information write or call OFFICE OF THE GRADUATE

MANAGER State College of Washington

Pullman Washington Telephone 1281

TICKET PRICES

HOMECOMING GAME

Goal to Goal $150

End Zone T 90

High School 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

DADS DAY

Goal to Goal $115

End Zone middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot T 75

High School _ 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

~iJkf

Page 3: ~T rllJJlJll1J P!lWW!lW

Homecoming Plans and Football Outlook Washington State alumni are getting

all primed for one of the most historishycal returns to their Alma Mater which they have ever planned Everything bears out the historical feature of this Homecoming game with Oregon on Saturday October 3

Many graduates and former stushydents are scheduling their trips so as to be in Pullman for the big noise parade and rally Friday evening This pre-game demonstration is always one of the most colorful features of a Washington State Homecoming

Alumni will register at the Alumni Office 211 Administration Building starting at three oclock Friday aftershynoon and on Saturday registration headquarters will be at the Washingshyton Hotel the official alumni headshyquarters for the 1942 Homecoming At both of these places alumni may purchase tickets to the annual Homeshycoming dance which will be held Satshyurday evening

The luncheon which is usually held for alumni at Homecoming will not be held this year Because of the uncershytainty in the number of returning alumni everyone thought it would be better to let the luncheon go for this year But we want every alumnus and friend to feel that the Washington Hotel is the greeting and visiting place for the weekend

The game needs no advertising as all Homecoming games are peppy thrillshying and the crowds go wild After the alumni and visitors have recovered their voices if that is possible and have found a snack to eat at the Hotel after the game they will be honored at the annual Homecoming dance in the Mens and Womens Gymnasiums

Homecomings at Vrashington State date from 1913 when Graduate Manshyager John Jones instituted the middotidea They have always been one of the colshyorful highlights of the college year the one time when the boys and girls of way back when once more go collegiate And if you dont think they really go collegiate just fill your car to capacity to save on gas and tires

powwow Seplember 1841

and drop down to Pullman Saturday October 3 and check up for yourself

Arthur (Spud) Carpenter 31 has been appointed Alumni Big Chief for the Homecoming festivities His outstretched hand will help you over the Welcome mat thats always out at the W S C campus

Heres the tentative program which has been made out so far

FRIDAY OCTOBER 2

3 00 PM Registration Alumni Ofshyfice Ad Bldg

6 00 PM Open House conducted by group houses and dormishytories

7 30 PM Noise Parade Campus and through Group House Disshytrict

800 PM Homecoming Pep Rally

SATURDAY OCTOBER 3

800 AM Alumni Association Board of D ire c tor s meeting Washington Hotel

9 00 AM Reg i s t rat i on begins at Washington Hotel

200 PMOregon vs Washington State Rogers Field

4 30 PM Get-together for Alumni and Friends at the Cougar Roundtable Club ( over Strupplers)

Continuation of Registrashytion at Hotel and Cougar Roundtable Club

900 PM Homecoming Dance sponshysored by ASSCW

Sounds like fun doesnt it If you dont think so come on over and weII prove it to you

~

Grid Outlook Bright -- IF w s C Expects Football Talent To

Rate High Hollingberys 17th Season

With the same problem of if faced by all other colleges Vl ashingshyton State looks to the 1942 football season and sees rays of sunshine Hottest team of the Coast at the end of last season the Pullman club holds excellent prospects for the coming campaign providing the material reshyturns to school It will be likely that some of the expected talent will be missing as a result of war service and Defense jobs but the same can be apshyplied to the opposition so Washington State should be no worse off in comshyparison

Lost Nine Veterans From the 1941 W S C team which

defeated the Coast and Rose Bowl champions of Oregon State along with the defending champs of Stanford and Oregon California Idaho and Gonzaga nine veterans including six starters have been lost by graduation They are Joe Beckman and Jim W ooddy tackles Stan Doepke and Stan Zemny guards Dale Gentry Herb Godfrey and Fred Spiegelberg ends and Bill Sewell and Felix Fletshycher halfbacks

Three lettermen eligible for the 1942 season have joined the service with others likely to go Bill Holmes slated for starting right half Eddie Pillings a fleet halfback and Joe Hemel veshyeran end are already in uniform

Stalwarts of the 1941 team who are on the faIl roster are BiIl Remington

(Continued on Page Seven)

3

LETTERS FROM ALUMNI

Mary Frances Dawson

Mary Frances Dawson 21 went to Egypt in the autumn of 1922 as a misshysionarY under the United Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions and has been there in Cairo since then with the excepshytion of two furlough years spent at PuIlshyman Miss Dawson returned to the United States last winter and the foIlowshying is a letter she wrote teIling of her experiences on her trip home

This is to give you notice that my address has been changed from Cairo Egypt to 112 North Fifth Avenue Yakishyma Washington

In May (1941) I received a letter from the Alumni Office which had been writshyten in January At the time it arrived I was in the hospital and very shortly after that I packed up to come home After waiting more than a month we were on our way A party of thirty missionaries from Cairo and about sixty from Amerishycan University of Beirut Syria travelled together Half of the number were childshyren under sixteen We went by one of His Majestys troopships (formerly the Aquatania) from Suez sailing July 30th to Sydney Australia twenty-three days which was very good time We were two days in Colombo where we lost the most of our traveIling companions who were something more than a thousand Italian prisoners-of-war Our next stoR was Freshyman tIe Australia but as our ship anchshyored outside the harbor and it was stormy we were not allowed off the boat

After two days there we went on to Sydney going south of Tasmania That bit was rather cold as we were rather far south and it was the winter time down yonder down under perhaps I should say We chafed a bit at having to stay in Sydney for four weeks but it was a pleasant place to be delayed The Ausshytralians were most friendly and kind Sydney is more like an American city than any other I have ever visited The secretary of the Australian-American Coshyoperation Movement was most kind and did a great deal for us I had several very interesting visits in some of the Domestic Science High Schools Australia is a big sparsely populated country

From Sydney we came on the Monshyterey of the Matson Line eighteen days to San Francisco The time was broken up with an overnight stop about twentyshysix hours at Auckland New Zealand and stops of several hours at Suva Fiji Pago Pago American Samoa Honulu and Los Angeles On this boat there were about two hundred and fifty civilian passengers and six hundred Australian and New Zealander airmen some ready to go on active service and the larger number to be trained some place in America We arrived in San Francisco on October 7th

The entire journey was made without mishaps of any kind On the troopship we were not as comfortable as on the Monterey but we really could not comshyplain as we were better off than we had thought we might be from stories we had heard of others who had travelIed from the Middle East The ship was steady going food was adequate The first two or three days in the Red Sea were hot I hope that I will never be hotter The ship traveIled under complete blackshyout AI1 windows and portholes were closed before sunset and kept that way tiII daylight the next morning This was not only a precaution against light showshying but also a safeguard against the ship so rapidly fiIling with water should she be struck We kept our life preservers in a place easily gotten and things laid by just in case-but some of us had been doing that in Cairo that is keeping things laid by in case of an air raid As to whether we ~ere near a raider at any time I do not know Before we reached Colombo we had had boat drilIs and had been given instructions After we left Colombo the Captain calIed us alI in and said that while he did not want to frightshyen us he wanted us to realize that we were in very dangerous waters and he went on emphasizing instructions already given us and giving rather more explicit ones He also said that when the signal

sounded again it would be the real thing (we had had three drils before this) but it did not sound again

Up until the time I left Cairo had had no bombs within the city but there had been a good many alerts and we at the American Mission ColIege for Girls had made a good many trips to the air raid shelter Two nights before I left the siren went about two am We had all gone over to the shelter which is in a building adjoining our dormitory I went back into the main building to check up when I saw one plane and saw two flares dropped There was a good deal of anti-aircraft fire That night there were said to have been five enemy planes over the city A little later Cairo did suffer some from bombing but I have not heard to what extent

But in spite of what is going on there people go on living in much the same routine There is not as much social life partly because of blackout conditions The past year the school with which I am connected had the largest enrolIment it had ever had We are having difficulty in getting teachers as we have always carried a number of American teachers

Since beginning this letter I hear that Dr Bryan has passed away A wonderful man he was and the Colege and State owe him much

Sincerely

Signed Mary Frances Dawson 21

Captain Langley (Continued on Page Eleven)

POWWOW Seplember ltf 4

CAMPUS HITS AND MISSES The American Alumni Council of

which the WSC Alumni Association is a member has proven its worth once again The AAC has just completed an arrangement with the War Departshyment whereby all their members will receive the name and address of every alumnus of their school who goes into the army-and within one week of his induction

~ The new Army Civilian Pilot Trainshy

ing Course is going forward with flyshying colors The 20 trainees are on the job 12 hours a day and have few idle minutes according to Prof Robert S Neilson military instructor athletic director and coordinator The daily schedule begins with calisthenics at 5 30 followed by flight training at the airport during the mori-ting Military drill and classroom instruction occushypy the afternoon and early evening The men now in training will complete their elementary work in eight weeks and then advance to secondary trainshying so that a new group can be started

~ The seven-semester reign as scholarshy

ship queens of the Washington State campus has ended for Kappa Alpha Theta national sorority when they were forced into second place by Alshypha Gamma Delta national sorority in the group scholastic standings for the spring semester announces Regisshytrar Frank T Barnard In third place is Maple Cottage trailed by Pi Beta Phi national sorority only 01 of a point below

Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity headed the mens group for the fourth consecutive time with an average of 8634 foIlowed by Acacia fraternity and Waller Hall

~ Three promotions have been made

on the ROTC staff at WSC Captain Howard H House has been promoted to the rank of major First Lieutenshyants George L Converse and Jerry D Naimy have gone one step up and are now wearing captains bars

powwow September 1841

Eleven different languages are the achievement of the nine soldiers now studying the Japanese language under the direction of Rev~rend John Cobb Spokane pastor Their classes are being held in CoIlege Hall Besides their language accomplishments which include fluent use of Hebrew Greek Sioux Indian Latin Portugese and Armenian as well as French Spanish Italian German and Polish these men may boast of representing almost every section of the United States They came from Massachusetts N~w York Wisconsin Illinois Kentucky Florida Texas South Dakota and Washington

Lt Howard Greer The Navy has called Lt Greer from his Publicity Directors desk in the Graduate Managers Office He is now in Rhode Island

The occupations of these men before they started military service indicate that there is much versatility among army men Ten weeks ago one of them was a footbaIl and basketball

coach and a professional boxer anshyother was a night club operator before he volunteered his services in May The others were in occupations such as operator of a soap business a deshypartment of health laboratory technishycian an accountant an assistant to a museum director and middot a student at Hamilton College

The Pullman-WSC stocking drive was a great success The silk hose will be sent to the Orient by the American Bureau for Medical Aid to China There they will be used as bandages for injured Chinese soldiers in the Asiatic war zones Mrs Robert S Neilson lead among individual conshytributors as she offered 56 stockings to the drive

~ The Phi Kappa Alpha house won

the $250 prize offered to the group on the campus for the best essay on The Use of Washington Lumber Prodshyucts The West Coast Lumbermans Association sponsored the contest on both this campus and the University of Washington campus Raymond Ellis and Carl Henry wrote the essay that won the prize on this campus

Leroy Bradbury ASSCW President

ASSCW Loses Officers Presidentshyelect Marvin Gilberg (Greek) has reshysigned both the ASSCW presidency and the co-captaincy of the basketball team to enter University of California Dental School in San Francisco Wilshyma Richardson (Independent) camshypus beauty was elected ASSCW Secshyretary but writes she wont be on the campus this year either The engageshyment of these two was announced this summer Could be somethings a going on but we wouldnt be a knowing shyyet

Bruce Bruchler who was elected Independent Junior Man on the Board of Control writes that he is now servshying Uncle Sam at Fort Douglas Utah so wont be back

Leroy Bradbury (Independent) will step up from the Vice-Presidents chair to take the reigns of the Associshyated Students this fall His first job will be to fill the other vacancies in his Board of Control

5

COUGARS IN THE SERVICE Three Washington State College alumshy

ni have been advanced to the rank of brigadier general it was announced by the war department

They are Lowell W Brooks 17 proshymoted from colonel infantry July 31 1942 Joseph L Philips 14 promoted from colonel cavalry July 28 1942 now assigned to army group Washington DC and S Lusker McCroskey 16 proshymoted from colonel coast artillery corps June 24 1942

Also listed by the department was a partial list containing names of seven WSC alumni who are now colonels and three who are lieutenant colonels in the United States service

Those listed as colonels were Arthur O Walsh 17 finance department (see write-up in June POWWOW) R H Back 18 infantry M V Fortier 16 ordinance department R M ODay 15 infantry now in the Pacific theater of war Harold G Holt 15 cavalry on duty with armored division (see write-up in June POWWOW) and William A Wapshypenstein 20 infantry who is on duty at a foreign station

The Lieutenant colonels were Hubert S Miller 21 corps of engineers Stanley M Nevin 25 veterinary corps now on duty at a foreign station and Cal Phillips 33 who is post adjutant at Randolph Field Texas and who formerly was WSC Alumni Secretary

Washington State College students who were graduated in class 42-F from Enid Army Flying School Oklahoma were Jack E Turner (1936-41) and Clark O Cordill (1935-40) Aviation Cadet Turshyner went to the Air Corps Advanced Flyshying School Lake Charles La and Aviashytion Cadet Cordill to the Air Corps Advanced Flying School Mission Texas Lt Bill Ambrosius 40 has been in the Phillipines and Java flying bombers He is now in Australia where he is a Finance Officer Censor Officer and Squadron Adjutant Ed Zydowsky freshman footshyball and baseball player in 1937 is in the army at Camp Grant Illinois playing on the baseball team In a game versus the Chanute Field baseball team the other day Ed hit one of the longest home runs ever seen in those parts

The promotion of Woodson Bennett 38 from the rank of First Lieutenant to that of Captain in the Medical Corps United States Army was announced by headquarters of the Medical Field Service School Carlisle Barracks Pa where Captain Bennett is an instructor in the Officer Candidate School Staff Sergeant

Howard R Melvin Jr 37 has been transferred to the Army Air Forces new Basic Flying School near Marana Arishyzona a desert villag~ some thirty miles from Tucson Prior to his induction into the Army Sgt Melvin was an accountant associated with the New York office of Price Waterhouse amp Co He is still enshygaged in accounting activities being now the assistant to the Finance Officer at themiddot Marana base Capt D R Morgan 30 is with General McArthur and his troops in Australia

Names that yesterday made headlines on local sports pages are today laboring in patriotic anonymity to impart toughshyening physical training to the Army flyshyers of tomorrow On the roster of physhysical middot training instructors in the West Coast Army Air Forces Training Center Santa Ana California are men who made sports history Three former WSCers arc John Klumb 39 Domonic George 35 and Joseph J Koegler 29

Second Lieutenant Louis 1 Miller 38 to 41 was commissioned as an officer in the U S Army Air Force at the Lubbock Army Flying School Lubbock Texas on July 3 1942 After a period of primary training at Pine Bluff Arkansas Lt Milshyler went to Perrin Field Texas for basic instruction At the Lubbock Army Flying School one of the newest and biggest in Americas victory program his training was in the twin-engine bomber type of aircraft Captain and Mrs Glen K Smith 36 are now at Fort Sam Houston Texas where Captain Smith is in the Medical Department of the Service School at the Station Hospital He writes that he had a letter from Ed Goldsworthy 36 inshyforming him that Ed and Oscar Schoff had been promoted to the grade of captain and are on duty in Puerto Rico

From the rank of Second Lieutenant to Captain in six months is the jump that Charles W Hoffman 41 took He reshyceived his wings and was commissioned as 2nd Lt on December 13 1941 and received his Captaincy in June 1942 Neil Seehom 40 to 42 has gone to New London Conn to attend the coast guard academy there He gained his place by passing competitive examinations He was secretary of the Intercollegiate Knights in his sophomore year at college

WSC WOMEN PLAY THEIR PART

Lois E Hamilton 31 has been ordershyed to San Francisco from where she will leave for forei gn duty as Head Dietitian in the U S Army Her orders were to

take enough clothing for three years Dorothy Bussard 34 is in Des Moines Iowa as part of Washingtons contingent of 46 to receive training in the Womens Army Auxiliary Corps

Judith McWhorter 39 Yakima and Janet Oswalt 42 Wilbur are new memshybers of the Women Appointed for Volunshyteer Emergency Service-WAVES-and will begin training at Smith college Northampton Mass

Graduating with the first WAAC class at Fort Des Moines was Dorothy McshyLellan Sunnyside 1939 business adminisshytration graduate

Helen E Dare 37 Second Vice Presishydent of the W S C Alumni Association wrote on August 18

I have accepted a position as personshynel technician with the Air Force Comshymand which will keep me traveling throughout the United States I am sorry to have to give up my new position in the Alumni Association but perhaps I can sell the Cougars There are only 60 of these trained technicians in the counshytry and a group of us (5) ar e the first girls to be accepted for the position so we are thrilled about it all and are deshytermined to do a good job

~

How About A Letter When Rodney Bittner 41 sent in his

$150 for another years subscription to the POWWOW he sent this note along

Just thought I would take time out between Jap bombs to write a few lines My folks forward the magazine to me and I do enjoy it (when possible to get our mail)

Would it be possible to put a bit in it asking any of myoid friends (if any) to drop a line What mail we sailors receive is greatly appreciated I am doing medical work on board ship and at times am very busy

On April 18 1942 I received commisshysion in Naval Reserve as an Ensign Since first of 1941 have been on active duty in Navy in Medical Corp and still am Also went through the December 7 1941 blitz at Pearl Harbor and other naval battles Hope to be in Naval Reshysearch Lab before the year is over Would appreciate hearing from anybodY who remembers me Address is USS MEDUSA c-o Fleet Postmaster San Francisco California or home address is 5049 South Thompson Tacoma Washshyington

POWWOW September 184 6

From Hotel Manageshyment To Quarter Masters Corps

By Shirley Ingram

Quarter Masters Corps-the subsist shyence division and commissary work of the army and navy finds priority value in college students trained in Hotel Adshymanagement says Lieut Col William L Morrison acting commandant Washshyington State College Military Science and Tactics

What mans army or navy would not find a growing need for men trained in the principfes of food selection and prepshyaration to manage commissary units The hotel field has long ranked near the top in big business but today the need for college trained men is causing unshyprecedented growth

With roots firmly fixed in chemical scishyence and nutritional knowledge and with practical work done in the large quantity kitchens of the State College food unitsshythe butcher shop and the bakeshop at the Commons-with all this background and advanced ROTC training these stushydents will find the challenging appetites of soldiers in the line of duty

During the school year they are given experience in the Hotel Washington in Pullman where they work in many capashycities-practicing the theory of classshyrooms-ranging from bus boys to assist shyant chefs to desk clerks

In addition to fifteen major home ecoshynomics courses Hotel Administration students take a number of courses in the school of business administration to beshycome acquainted with methods of acshycounting Courses in economics money and banking business finance advertisshying business law and labor problems give them an additional background for their work and for handling Uncle Sams finances Other courses demandshying their complete knowledge are psyshychology aFchitecture plumbing and enshygineering personnel management and equipment engineering

Twelve outstanding hotel men of the Northwest have been selected as an adshyvisory committee to aid and direct in the

planning of the Hotel Administration course Mr Walter CHst Culmstock Arms Mr James A McCluskey Davenshyport Hotel and Mr Sam Jordon Sposhykane Mr Harry Gowman Gowman Hotel Mr Frank Hull Olympia Hotel Mr Harold Dupar and Mr Frank W Thurston New Washington Hotel Mr A J Barash Secretary of the Washingshyton State Hotel Association Seattle Mr Thad Pierce Hotel Olympia Olympia Mr Earl McInnes Hotel MultnomahbullPOWWOW September lUI

Portland Mr Guy Toombes Hotel Utah Salt Lake City and Mr Carl Morck Morck Hotel Aberdeen compose the committee

Spokane serves as the laboratory for field trips that are taken to give the stushydents first hand knowledge of hotels Affiliated with the Spokane Chapter No 8 of Hotel 6reeters of America a WSC Greeters Club has been formed by Hotel students

In cooperation with the Spokane chaRshyter speakers are brought to the college at various times to discuss present probshylems in the hotel field A $100 scholarshyship is awarded each year to an outshystanding junior by the Spokane Hotel Greeters

The following partial roster of gradushyates of the Hotel Administration course of the State College shows their place in the United States Army and Navy-Capshytain Ward Walker Recreation Center Fort Lewis Ensign Robert H Hoffman U S Navy Air Force Washington DC First Lt Earl Redlin Infantry Camp Roberts Calif First Lt Harry Lane Army Quartermaster Corps Riverside Calif Second Lt Deane Cooper Officer Sale School Air Corps Flying School Victorville Calif Maurice Youngs Air Corps Flying School Stockton Calif

Indeed the 1942 hotel-military students are finding a new line of defense and are being geared in an all out effort to do their part in the subsistence dishyvision

~ HOMECOMING 1941

Board of Directors Meetinit

Alumni registering

Football Outlook (Continued Irom Page Three)

center Bill Ward left guard Nick Susoeff right end Jay Stoves left halfback Fred Small quarter and Bob Kennedy fullback all of whom did outstanding work last autumn George Dyson and Jim Wright a pair of 225-pounders who saw considerashyble action as sophomores last year are the probable starters at tackle

Renfro Will Return

Dick Renfro boxcar back who stayed out of college last year after two seasons of fine varsity service is due to be back and will be assigned to the blocking quarterback post Tom Brannigan stocky guard of the last two years was moved to quarter durshying spring practice and is expected to remain there

Frank Akins hard-running twoshyyear veteran halfback who was out of school last year will be back and will probably see duty at right half instead of left Earl Brenneis who broke in as a sophomore last fall will also be at right half Frank Londos husky fuIIshyback vet will bolster the backfield

Other lettermen on the list include Buster Hollingbery center Rod Giske and Gene Arger guards Mel Holben and Bill Gustafson tackles Max Dodge end and Jim Boyle quartershyback

Good Soph Prospects

Up from last years freshmen Jelly Anderson end Harry Planck guard and Jim Thompson halfback are topshynotch varsity prospects Marv Walker junior college transfer is a capable performer at halfback while Gene Evans and Benton Bangs both backs Were reserves last year

Other sophomore candidates include Vern Oliver center Tom Parry and John Godfrey guards Rufus Boldshyman and Les Metzger tackles Ralph Thompson George Kitna and Wallace Kramer ends and Ron Waggoner fullback

~ Plan now to see the Cougars in action

on Homecoming October 3

7

NEEDED Addresses For These Missing Washington Staters

A constant effort is being made to keep track of State College alumni but despite the effort it becomes a real task to know just where everyone is located During the past year many lost alumni have been founel but others have dropped out of sight and the list remains about the same

We need your help I Check over the alumni listed in both the Long Lost and Newly Lost lists and let Us know if you have any addresses or information which would lead to addresses of these people You will find a form for returning this information on the next page Thank you

Newly Lost 1910 Imus Clifford C 1914 Foster Dean Edward 1916 Hart Stadden S 1917 Griffith Mrs George

(Irene Palmer) 1918 Goertzen Mrs J A

(Alma Anderson) Homme Olav H 19 19 Rees Florence M Cutler Clarence W 1920 Brooks Mrs Juanita Ridenaur Horace Stam Dr -Edward L 192 3 Hollingsworth Walter M 192 4 Greenberg Nathan Lavin William A Williams Earl A bull Wooddy Mrs Edith L 192 5 Casey Sister Maureen Gage Kenneth McKillip William A Vincent Mrs Walter E

(Jennie Secrest) 1926 Wilfong Mrs J L

(Gladys Gue) 192 7 Mueller Vivian 1 Olson Emanuel Wilson Harry K 1928 Graham Lola Vivien Johnson Kenneth R Miller William A 1929 Yuni Richard V 1930 Osterman Mrs Leo

(Ana N egoescu) Pittman Chester Allen Swartz Helen Jane 1931 Rowland Katharine 1932 Guisleman George V Oien Gustav T middot Pohlman H Kingsley 1933 Henderson Earl L Van Doren Winifred M 1934 Jackson Virgil M Matthews John S Richey Loran P Wilson William F 1936 Agee James R Stewart Lorne J W Talcott Robert Van Patten

8

1937 Marlatt Leigh R 1938 McCabe Mrs Burton

(Helen Wersen) Siepman Richard D 1939 Tomita Junichi 1940 Ross Earle R 1941 Atkin Shirlen E Byers Doris V Fernandez Cipriana C Zier Ruth Lillian 1942 Ashton Willard H Hoop Jay Dee Jasper Dr Donald E Robinson LeRoy D

Long Lost 1899 Larkin Charles T 1900 Anderson John Frank Brown Peter

1903 Wallis William Alden 1~04 Carter Emily Barker Foster Sidney F 1906 McKenzie Frank William 1907 Andrews Mrs Maude C Bryant Roy E Grice Mrs Otto (Florence

Knepper) 1908 Baddeley Dr Joseph Clarence Burg Mrs Walter A (Myrtle

Boyles) Simmons John Leslie Wilson Frank E Woods Tony W

(f~fi Clarence E Kelly Edna Rosene Laird Marple Everett Miller Claude A Smith Virgil Rodney Talbot Charles William 19 10 Bobeau Lucius McClellan Limon Gregorio ~II Couch Dr Otto Justin Maeda Teruzo Marston William Ray Rogers Jessie B Strickler Clair H 1912 Reeder George Kingsburg Sands Olea M Warwick Mrs Preston (Mary

Mann) 1913 Craner Albert E Creveling Alfred Benjamin Gaddis Dee Kirsch Karl

Knapp Harold Stanford Leavitt Clarence Ashton 1914 Almen Herman Victor Long Delbert C Meyer Henry William Newman Mrs Pauline Davis

(Pauline Davis) Rodgers Roliert Julius Spiers Archibald L C Wilson Philip Guy 191 5 Brown Stonewall Koppen Walter J McCormick Francis Howard Ney John Henry Platt Mrs Philip S Anette

Nicholl) Puckett Thomas C Stendquist Lender L 1916 Batts Bertha A McLaughlin George Swanson Swen Arthur Van Horn Bower 1917 Baker Adolph Irvin Greene Mrs W H C (Chrismiddot

tine M Wood)Humphrey Homer W Jeffrey Blanche C Luce Dr Harry C Miller Aubrey C Richardson Elizabeth Roach Mrs C M (Etl)a Batts)Russell Fred Lawrence Sato Jachi Sato Shinijiro Todd Paul Edward 19 1 8 Boyle Margaret Croonquistz Mrs Hugh A

(Helen T Holroyd)Ewing Clarence Charles Krafft E Gertrude Sisseau Mrs Fred G (Ora

Mabel Hickman)Smith Mrs Charlotte Robinson Traeger LeRoy Edwin

1919 Beck Esther LydiaJudges Bertha rhistlewaite Garnet VirgilWhitford Richard W

1920 Brett Matie DorothyBrooks Bert Edgar Mary Charlotte Henderson Winfield Lester Martin Harrison G McAninch Mrs Marion E

(Evelyn N Bradbury)Moore Gladys B Riviere Mrs Frank (Suzanne

M Moinard)Sera Sei Ropion Yvonne GeorgetteRitchie Helen Mae Seyer Mary Emily Shroll Walter Scott Shaw Robert L Stam Dr Edward Lockwood Stanton Will ClydeTainaka Ben Katsumi Valdivieso Fausto Wright Geraldine Ziegler Adolph

1921 Bartruff John A Black Mrs Van Nest (Mry

Todd Hodges) Collins Homer Arthur Fitch Mrs Clara

(Clara Hefty) Holmes Edna Alice Isamu Inouye Kruger John Henry Lyse Alvin Theodore Lytle Nelson Edwin Medby Arthur Moodhe David Herbert Muir Esther Davidson Myers Earl H Newland Mrs Ruth H

(Charles J) Rinehart John Marshall Street Mrs Julian

(Marguerite Skibeness) Taggert David Vander Heyden Joseph Wm M Watzek Peter Whitman Mrs Lorna Longwell 1922 Belknap Clifford Vernon Carr Mildred Irene Chamberlain Lowell Colby Phillip Henry Fox Heggmaier Caroline

Kee Mrs W H (Loree Whitney)

Patrick James G Pohl Clara Mildred Robin Lyla Josephine Watson James Winkler Stanley C 192 3 Bessette Josephine A Byrnes Eleanor Dunegan Irvin Ferguson Dewitt Talmage French Olive Bell Hansen Arthur Caleb Ideno Harry H Ishiyama Eiitsu Kidnay Katherine Page Carroll Gordon Taylor Harry Albert Zimmerman Ernest Theodore 1924 Barnes Ralph Howard Carlile Dallas Elijah Howard Henry R Johnson Merrit H Liu Min Chang Messenger William P Reese Chester G Simmons Mrs Estella J Snodgrass Milton Dean Steiner Marie Anne TeeGarden Mrs Lewis

(Alice Prindle) Westbrook John Lewis

192 5 Andes Mrs James O

(Esther Crawford) Campbell John Gordon Chandler Norman Edwards Ruth Harbeck Glenn C Hibbard Lorin G Hinton Paul Johnson Askel Herbert Kerr H Catherine Moore Margaret Newton George A Skinner Mrs Robert

(Eva Nordin) Smith Edward N White Mary Anieta Yasuda Masao

1926 Ballantyne Helen Man Coberly Dwight Crane Esther Lenore Davenport Earle Glenn Fisher William Alonzo Gillis Ewen Hess Mildred Eula Johnson Dr Walford Joseph Kreider Anna C Lapp Paul Alfred McIntire Aileen Olive Naggy Steve Norton Alice Augusta Owen Roy Martin Walker Clarence Wright Walton Edward Deane Mamie Engstrom Alva Carl Gudger Bessie Leona Johnson Frank J Largent Harry E Logan Mrs Hugh L

(Ethel Dora Keevy) McGucken Edward G Nakagawa Taniji Harry Nelson James Ade Okui James Jito Purnell Orien Virgil Sievers Mrs George

(Nelle V Jones) Smith David J Westbrook Mrs Jane Howe Worlds Clarence H

1928 Bennett Lawrence M Kowal Joe Lee Chite Meeker Herbert L Olson Esther Louise Taylor James Eldon Wilkie Mildred LaVelle

1929 Aquino Antonio Quesada Connolly Pat Wlliam Dial Mabel Jacobson Keener John Burton Jr Lester Viola G McFarland Mrs Marion Bush Lew Mi Ryan Mrs William C

(Maxine Damrell) Scranton Idol N Stevenson Robert S VanBossche Leonard

lowwow September 1141

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbull bullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1930 Allison James Frank Bailey Mrs Lyman N

(Helen Bolitho)Fang Tsung Han Donald Lewis Fox Hennessy Mary Lemmia Lavett AntollY Eustace Long F Cecil Olson Ruth Wilamena Platter John Laurence Ralph Harry Robert Roberts Mary Elizabeth Schirmer Evalyne Carolyn Steelman Julien Randolph Veldee Mrs R Marie

1931 Abey Lester E Chun William B Fuller David Thomas Fulmer Fred Roy McCall Harriett Irene Mahoney Alice Madelon Nelson M Maxine Schimelpfenig Clyde F Wilson James Walker

1932 Braganza Bonifacio B Carlson Oscar Theodore Gage Frank Henry Kaylor Raymond Doyle Meyers Merton Isabelle Micu Genenato Realin Miyota Nathaniel Susumu Noel James P Nyuha Bert K Padua Andrew M Suguitan Eustaquio Abella

1933 Corner Harold A Howland Alice Katherine Imes Eva Carol Layos Robert D Miller Monroe Eugene Ysui Yung Chi Young JeChun

1934 ~Balatero Jose Ancheta Galbraith Robert Donald ~ Herren Mary Peyton Hsu Pin Ling ~ Hytpwitz Lawrence David Leonard James Thomas ~ Little Myrtle Louise Ramos Inocencio Raguine ~ Scott Edward Rodney ~1935 ~ Dunbar Alver Herrold Dwight Elmer Jones Del E Lundberg Bert OmiddotShea Bill S Pontesso Leonard Arthur Stewart Daniel R Stewart Everett Earle Lyle E Tompkins

1936 Burns David Robert Carter Daniel Melvin Clnk Herbert Edward Elson Miss Vinnie Haynes Laird H Jewell Charles Arthur Rhine Duhois Clarence

1937 Holmes Richard Arthur Hougen Esther Larson Joseph B Snodgrass Jack H

1938 Akers Margaret M Dawley Muriel E Jones Juanita Sexton Ormsbee Richard Armstrong Smith Harold Gus Tamura Yoshio

1939 Black Richard Clark Burton Sydney Leonard Stubbs James W Nelson Howard Edmond Palafox Anastacio Laida Wooten Clyde Curtis

94 Cook Albert Thomas Jessup Ellen Clara

POWWOW September 1941

The LOST Are Found Alumni Office 211 Adminstration Building Pullman Washington

Gentlement Id like to report the following round-up of alumni on your Lost list

(signed) Name __

Address

Name Class

Address __ _ _ _

Lead to gt[ address __

Narne _ Class _

Address _ - - ____

Lead to get address ~~____

Name _ Class ___

Address ______

Lead to get address - - - -__

Narne _ Class _

Address

Lead to get address ~-

s~- _- Class __

Lead to get address ~- --- -

I Alumni Records There is increasing need for a mondeg complete record of Washington State Alumni

To this end your Alumni Office has searched all possible college records and has also received a very few personal data records from individuals This form will give your Alumni Office the essential informlltion which it needs from you Please accommoshydate us by filling it out and returning it with the halance of this page Thank you

Narne _ Class Degree _

Business firm - Position

Residence address shy

Date of birth Where - shy

Married on To yen bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Who attended (College) __ Class

Children (ages and names) ~

--------------_---------------------_-----------------------_------------------_------------------------_--___-----__shy

War record - - yen

Extra-curricular activity since leaving College (public offices clubs honors etc)

--- ------------------------------ ~__-- ----__-_ _____-__-__-_--_ ____----

_---_ _------__ ----------_--__----_______ ___--_--_-----_---____ shy

If you have not already submitted one we should like a recent photograph of yourshyself for our biographical file

9

The right minded alumnus can do much to keep the institution in a right In This Alumni Worldlight before the citizens of the state upon which it must depend for supshyport H e is in a sense its advertising agency If he gets Oltt of touch or out of sympathy with his Alma Mater she thereby suffers a great loss

-Thomas Arkle Clark Long-time Dean of Men Univ of Illinois

NEW LIFE MEMBERS JULY AND AUGUST

H H WAITE 26

BERT S NORLING 26

COL HAROLD G HOLT 15

l1R AND MRS ALLEN MANRING 32

1910 Walter E Rutherford is the owner of Rutherfords Pharmacy in Oakesdale Washington

1923 Mrs Alfred C Schy (Ora West) is living at Lamont Washington The Westss have three children Alfred Lee 6 Alan 4 and Marjorie Jane 2

1924 Mr and Mrs Dorcy D Nog1ey (Ida Hedborg) have one son born March 24 1939 They live at 684 Highland Avenue Glen Ellyn Illinois

1926 J F Gates is Property Officer and Comshypany Quarter Master at Camp Lee Vir-

How To Be A Member In Good Standing of the WSC Alumni

Association Its easy

You send cash money order or check amounting to $150 to the Alumni Office In return you receive a years subscription to the POWWOW official publication of the association printed ten times each year

Now that its on your mind why dont you - this minute - fill out the blank below and join an organization that is growing every day

Life Membership in the organization including years POWWOW $500

Name Class

Address City State

Please find $ for a years membership in the Association

Please bill me for the same amount on c and start sending POWWOW now

ginia He is an Entomologist

Mr and Mrs Harrie O Bohlke are livshying at 9547 - 24th Street N W Seattle Mr Bohlke is in the Industrial Departshyment of the Seattle Chamoer of Comshymerce From 1934 to 1941 he was the chief inspector for the Washington State Rignor Control Board and in 1939 he was in the Grand Lodge of BPOE

1927 Dr Harold Weatherman is a Pediatrician at the Rees-Stealy Clinic in San Diego California He lives at 3531 Arnold Ave

1928 James T Pringle is in the transportation Sales Department of Westinghouse Elecshytric and Manufacturing Company and lives at No 16 - 575 South Negley Aveshynue Pittsburgh Pennsylvania He and his wife (Margaret Palmer x 31) have a 20-month-old baby girl Helen

1930 Clifford E Long is in the United States

Employment Service as Manager and is ~ living at Hood River Oregon He is married and has two children In Janushyi ary 1940 he was given a medical disshy charge from the army with the rank of

Lieutenant At present he is a re-emshy_ ployment committeeman and works on the Selective Service System

Mrs Gara1d L Dixon (Helen Casey) lives at N 5111 Stone Street Bonners Ferry Idaho and has two children Carol Ann 10 and Jane Ellen 8 Mr and Mrs N Harold Squier are living at 850 Sunnyside Chicago Illinois with their nine-year-old daughter Nancy Maria Mr Squier is the training supershyvisor of the Commonwealth Edison and is acting as a teacher and worker in Civilian Defense

1931 Dr Esther M Roehr lives with her Docshytor husband at 903 E John Seattle They have two children Sandra Marie and Karen Eppa Stanley Ray is office nurse and anesthetist for Dr ] F Scott Surgeon in Yakima Washington She and her husband Dr Kenneth C Ray live at 213 N 24th Avenue Yakima Mr and Mrs Leonard W Swanson are living at Eatonville Washington The Swansons have two children Donald Alan 4 and Richard Lennart 1

1933 A Wilfred Welch is the Asst Engineer in the U S Engineer Dept at Eugene Oregon The Mr and Mrs (Verna C Robinson 32) live at 1380 Villord Street with Nancy Gayl their daughter

POWWOW September lUI 10

1934 Dr Marlowe Dittebrandt is a practicing physician in Portland Oregon She lives at the Heathman Hotel Her business adshydress is Room 212 Studio Building

1935 Alfred S Cleveland has been the Adshyministrative Assistant in the U S Deshypartment of Agriculture at Harvard Unishyversity Cambridge Mass In June howshyever he was called into active duty as a Lieutenant (JG) in the U S N R

1936 Rolf B Jorgensen is the Assistant Range Examiner of the U S Forest Service at Saint Anthony Idaho He married Doroshythy L Welch x31 in 1938 and they have one daughter almost two years old

Pauline Thomas is the P E and Health Teacher in the Seattle Public Schools and lives at 1019 Terry Avenue

1937 The chief wine chemist at the Gibson Wine Company in Fort Mitchell Kenshytucky is Wilbur Zeve1y whose address is Rivard Drive Dixie Highway

Robert E Click is Sanitarian in the Yakishyma City-County Health Dept He was treasurer of the Western Washington Dairy Technology Assn during 1941shy1942 406 South 27th Avenue Yakima Washington will reach him

~

Letters From Alums (Continued from Page Four)

Captain Claire Langley 36 sent in this letter to the alumni office recently from the Hawaiian Islands Captain Langleys address is 161st Infantry C O Service Co APO 25 coo P M San Francisco California

Pehea Oe

You see Im getting akamai Hawaiian isnt spoken much but the names are sure nani-if you say em right Its Ho no 100 100 not Hannah Loo lah That makes the kamaaina huhu and pegs you for a malihini And put a soft e on the end of Hawaii like this Hah weye e Thats no pilikia Now that youve had your language lesson Ill tell you someshything about the people and their islands The Hawaiian wahines are beautiful and their kane big and friendly And when they tell me Hele mai e ai they dont have to say that again I just answed Mahalo nui and move right in

Their best work though is Aloha

POWWOW SepCember lUI

Youll find it at the end of this letter But it means much more than just goodshybye Its Hello Love to You Good Morning How ya doing-any kind of a pleasant greeting And if a Hawaiian replies Aloha no believe it not he means Aloha yes Some newcomers get their Hawaiian all mixed up One pupule tourist wrote home that he was sitting on a lei with a lanai round his neck

Whats cookin Maybe a hukilau folshylowed by a big luau Hawaiians bake puaa with vegetables in an underground oven I ts some kaukau Your opu sure sticks out after all that fresh pineapple poi and fish-including one little feller they call humuhumunukunukuapuaa No wonder they say the language has vowel trouble at a lua a keikikane will walk right up an cocopalm in his bare feet and toss you down nuts to drink out of And then theyll shred the leaves and weave you a papale The hula dancers with pua in their hair sure go to town in fresh ti-Ieaf skirts and red muumuu They even put jitter-bugging in the shade And thats no hoopunipuni

But the deal here is surfing at Waikiki Riding a surfboard is a kick but takes practice Ill do mine in an outrigger canoe with a Hawaiian steering When he hollers Huki its lucky that old blue sea is wela for you certainly take a wetshyting as you toboggan down a huge wave Some thrill And no hele wawae back

For directions in Hawaii they tell you to go mauka or makai-thats to the mountains or toward the sea When you Go for broke its called welakahao If you cant understand all this letter look in the corner Thats a good start and when I learn some more Ill write you wikiwiki Good-bye now

Aloha nui

Signed Claire Langley

Helpful hints Pehea oe-Howre you Akamal-clever Nani-beautilul Huhu-angry Kamaalna-old timer lIaJlhini-newcomer Pilika-trouble Wahine-woman Kane-man Hele mal e ai-come In and eat Mahalo nul-thanks Pupule-looney Lei-garland Lanai-verandah Hukilau-net fishing Luau-feast Kelki-kane-boy Puaa-plg Kaukau-food Opu-stomach Papale-hat Pua-flower Muumuu-waist Hoopunlpun-lIe Huki-pull Wela-warm Hele wawae-walk Nul-big Wlklwlkl--quck

in other word Ity JOHN CLINTON

I As the His-CEE pano-Plymshy

outhandI bull grow old toshy~ gether my reshy

s12ect for the old bus inshycreases I think

when at last the war is over and new cars are once more availshyable Ill keep the H-P and have it stuffed

For example the other day one of the Union 011 engineers told me that If the speed of my enshygine were not reduced by the transmission and differential the H-P1ymouth would travel at something like 240 miles per houri Wowl

I never knew

before just tpMwhat the transshymission and _ differential ~ were for But it turns out that they tame the power generated by your engine and apply it in tableshyspoonfuls to the wheels And incidentally theyre two vital departments of your car

The transmission has something like 54 separate parts whizzing around Inside a sealed box It takes special lubricant that will withstand extreme high presshysure to lubricate that stuff 4nd If you let It go more than 5000 miles youre taking chances

Its too technical to explain in this space (even if I could do itl) but if you drive without proper lubricant in the T amp D a very unpleasant thing will hap pen The transmission will fOWl at you and the differentia will huml And once they start theyll never stop til you put in new expensive gears

So start now to have your Union Minute Mencheckyour transmission and differenshytial for you Theyll keep

a~curate records of when the service Is due and notify you to come In But-dont take chance All you get Is a noisy carl

1942 Washington State Football Schedule

Sept 26 Stanford T bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull Palo Alto Oct 3 OREGON Pullman

(Homecoming) Oct 10 MONTANA _ Pullman

(Dads Day) Oct 17 U S C Los Angeles Oct 24 O S C Portland Oct 31 Open Nov 7 Michigan State Spokane Nov 14 Idaho Tmiddotmiddotmiddot bullbullbullbull bull bullbullbullbull bull bullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull Moscow Nov 21 2nd Air Force Spokane Nov 28 Washington Seattle Dec 5 Texas A amp M San Antonio

FRESHMAN SCHEDULE Oct 31 Eastern Washington

College of Education~Pullman Nov 6 Idaho _ Moscow Nov 14 Washington Pullman

For tickets or information write or call OFFICE OF THE GRADUATE

MANAGER State College of Washington

Pullman Washington Telephone 1281

TICKET PRICES

HOMECOMING GAME

Goal to Goal $150

End Zone T 90

High School 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

DADS DAY

Goal to Goal $115

End Zone middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot T 75

High School _ 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

~iJkf

Page 4: ~T rllJJlJll1J P!lWW!lW

LETTERS FROM ALUMNI

Mary Frances Dawson

Mary Frances Dawson 21 went to Egypt in the autumn of 1922 as a misshysionarY under the United Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions and has been there in Cairo since then with the excepshytion of two furlough years spent at PuIlshyman Miss Dawson returned to the United States last winter and the foIlowshying is a letter she wrote teIling of her experiences on her trip home

This is to give you notice that my address has been changed from Cairo Egypt to 112 North Fifth Avenue Yakishyma Washington

In May (1941) I received a letter from the Alumni Office which had been writshyten in January At the time it arrived I was in the hospital and very shortly after that I packed up to come home After waiting more than a month we were on our way A party of thirty missionaries from Cairo and about sixty from Amerishycan University of Beirut Syria travelled together Half of the number were childshyren under sixteen We went by one of His Majestys troopships (formerly the Aquatania) from Suez sailing July 30th to Sydney Australia twenty-three days which was very good time We were two days in Colombo where we lost the most of our traveIling companions who were something more than a thousand Italian prisoners-of-war Our next stoR was Freshyman tIe Australia but as our ship anchshyored outside the harbor and it was stormy we were not allowed off the boat

After two days there we went on to Sydney going south of Tasmania That bit was rather cold as we were rather far south and it was the winter time down yonder down under perhaps I should say We chafed a bit at having to stay in Sydney for four weeks but it was a pleasant place to be delayed The Ausshytralians were most friendly and kind Sydney is more like an American city than any other I have ever visited The secretary of the Australian-American Coshyoperation Movement was most kind and did a great deal for us I had several very interesting visits in some of the Domestic Science High Schools Australia is a big sparsely populated country

From Sydney we came on the Monshyterey of the Matson Line eighteen days to San Francisco The time was broken up with an overnight stop about twentyshysix hours at Auckland New Zealand and stops of several hours at Suva Fiji Pago Pago American Samoa Honulu and Los Angeles On this boat there were about two hundred and fifty civilian passengers and six hundred Australian and New Zealander airmen some ready to go on active service and the larger number to be trained some place in America We arrived in San Francisco on October 7th

The entire journey was made without mishaps of any kind On the troopship we were not as comfortable as on the Monterey but we really could not comshyplain as we were better off than we had thought we might be from stories we had heard of others who had travelIed from the Middle East The ship was steady going food was adequate The first two or three days in the Red Sea were hot I hope that I will never be hotter The ship traveIled under complete blackshyout AI1 windows and portholes were closed before sunset and kept that way tiII daylight the next morning This was not only a precaution against light showshying but also a safeguard against the ship so rapidly fiIling with water should she be struck We kept our life preservers in a place easily gotten and things laid by just in case-but some of us had been doing that in Cairo that is keeping things laid by in case of an air raid As to whether we ~ere near a raider at any time I do not know Before we reached Colombo we had had boat drilIs and had been given instructions After we left Colombo the Captain calIed us alI in and said that while he did not want to frightshyen us he wanted us to realize that we were in very dangerous waters and he went on emphasizing instructions already given us and giving rather more explicit ones He also said that when the signal

sounded again it would be the real thing (we had had three drils before this) but it did not sound again

Up until the time I left Cairo had had no bombs within the city but there had been a good many alerts and we at the American Mission ColIege for Girls had made a good many trips to the air raid shelter Two nights before I left the siren went about two am We had all gone over to the shelter which is in a building adjoining our dormitory I went back into the main building to check up when I saw one plane and saw two flares dropped There was a good deal of anti-aircraft fire That night there were said to have been five enemy planes over the city A little later Cairo did suffer some from bombing but I have not heard to what extent

But in spite of what is going on there people go on living in much the same routine There is not as much social life partly because of blackout conditions The past year the school with which I am connected had the largest enrolIment it had ever had We are having difficulty in getting teachers as we have always carried a number of American teachers

Since beginning this letter I hear that Dr Bryan has passed away A wonderful man he was and the Colege and State owe him much

Sincerely

Signed Mary Frances Dawson 21

Captain Langley (Continued on Page Eleven)

POWWOW Seplember ltf 4

CAMPUS HITS AND MISSES The American Alumni Council of

which the WSC Alumni Association is a member has proven its worth once again The AAC has just completed an arrangement with the War Departshyment whereby all their members will receive the name and address of every alumnus of their school who goes into the army-and within one week of his induction

~ The new Army Civilian Pilot Trainshy

ing Course is going forward with flyshying colors The 20 trainees are on the job 12 hours a day and have few idle minutes according to Prof Robert S Neilson military instructor athletic director and coordinator The daily schedule begins with calisthenics at 5 30 followed by flight training at the airport during the mori-ting Military drill and classroom instruction occushypy the afternoon and early evening The men now in training will complete their elementary work in eight weeks and then advance to secondary trainshying so that a new group can be started

~ The seven-semester reign as scholarshy

ship queens of the Washington State campus has ended for Kappa Alpha Theta national sorority when they were forced into second place by Alshypha Gamma Delta national sorority in the group scholastic standings for the spring semester announces Regisshytrar Frank T Barnard In third place is Maple Cottage trailed by Pi Beta Phi national sorority only 01 of a point below

Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity headed the mens group for the fourth consecutive time with an average of 8634 foIlowed by Acacia fraternity and Waller Hall

~ Three promotions have been made

on the ROTC staff at WSC Captain Howard H House has been promoted to the rank of major First Lieutenshyants George L Converse and Jerry D Naimy have gone one step up and are now wearing captains bars

powwow September 1841

Eleven different languages are the achievement of the nine soldiers now studying the Japanese language under the direction of Rev~rend John Cobb Spokane pastor Their classes are being held in CoIlege Hall Besides their language accomplishments which include fluent use of Hebrew Greek Sioux Indian Latin Portugese and Armenian as well as French Spanish Italian German and Polish these men may boast of representing almost every section of the United States They came from Massachusetts N~w York Wisconsin Illinois Kentucky Florida Texas South Dakota and Washington

Lt Howard Greer The Navy has called Lt Greer from his Publicity Directors desk in the Graduate Managers Office He is now in Rhode Island

The occupations of these men before they started military service indicate that there is much versatility among army men Ten weeks ago one of them was a footbaIl and basketball

coach and a professional boxer anshyother was a night club operator before he volunteered his services in May The others were in occupations such as operator of a soap business a deshypartment of health laboratory technishycian an accountant an assistant to a museum director and middot a student at Hamilton College

The Pullman-WSC stocking drive was a great success The silk hose will be sent to the Orient by the American Bureau for Medical Aid to China There they will be used as bandages for injured Chinese soldiers in the Asiatic war zones Mrs Robert S Neilson lead among individual conshytributors as she offered 56 stockings to the drive

~ The Phi Kappa Alpha house won

the $250 prize offered to the group on the campus for the best essay on The Use of Washington Lumber Prodshyucts The West Coast Lumbermans Association sponsored the contest on both this campus and the University of Washington campus Raymond Ellis and Carl Henry wrote the essay that won the prize on this campus

Leroy Bradbury ASSCW President

ASSCW Loses Officers Presidentshyelect Marvin Gilberg (Greek) has reshysigned both the ASSCW presidency and the co-captaincy of the basketball team to enter University of California Dental School in San Francisco Wilshyma Richardson (Independent) camshypus beauty was elected ASSCW Secshyretary but writes she wont be on the campus this year either The engageshyment of these two was announced this summer Could be somethings a going on but we wouldnt be a knowing shyyet

Bruce Bruchler who was elected Independent Junior Man on the Board of Control writes that he is now servshying Uncle Sam at Fort Douglas Utah so wont be back

Leroy Bradbury (Independent) will step up from the Vice-Presidents chair to take the reigns of the Associshyated Students this fall His first job will be to fill the other vacancies in his Board of Control

5

COUGARS IN THE SERVICE Three Washington State College alumshy

ni have been advanced to the rank of brigadier general it was announced by the war department

They are Lowell W Brooks 17 proshymoted from colonel infantry July 31 1942 Joseph L Philips 14 promoted from colonel cavalry July 28 1942 now assigned to army group Washington DC and S Lusker McCroskey 16 proshymoted from colonel coast artillery corps June 24 1942

Also listed by the department was a partial list containing names of seven WSC alumni who are now colonels and three who are lieutenant colonels in the United States service

Those listed as colonels were Arthur O Walsh 17 finance department (see write-up in June POWWOW) R H Back 18 infantry M V Fortier 16 ordinance department R M ODay 15 infantry now in the Pacific theater of war Harold G Holt 15 cavalry on duty with armored division (see write-up in June POWWOW) and William A Wapshypenstein 20 infantry who is on duty at a foreign station

The Lieutenant colonels were Hubert S Miller 21 corps of engineers Stanley M Nevin 25 veterinary corps now on duty at a foreign station and Cal Phillips 33 who is post adjutant at Randolph Field Texas and who formerly was WSC Alumni Secretary

Washington State College students who were graduated in class 42-F from Enid Army Flying School Oklahoma were Jack E Turner (1936-41) and Clark O Cordill (1935-40) Aviation Cadet Turshyner went to the Air Corps Advanced Flyshying School Lake Charles La and Aviashytion Cadet Cordill to the Air Corps Advanced Flying School Mission Texas Lt Bill Ambrosius 40 has been in the Phillipines and Java flying bombers He is now in Australia where he is a Finance Officer Censor Officer and Squadron Adjutant Ed Zydowsky freshman footshyball and baseball player in 1937 is in the army at Camp Grant Illinois playing on the baseball team In a game versus the Chanute Field baseball team the other day Ed hit one of the longest home runs ever seen in those parts

The promotion of Woodson Bennett 38 from the rank of First Lieutenant to that of Captain in the Medical Corps United States Army was announced by headquarters of the Medical Field Service School Carlisle Barracks Pa where Captain Bennett is an instructor in the Officer Candidate School Staff Sergeant

Howard R Melvin Jr 37 has been transferred to the Army Air Forces new Basic Flying School near Marana Arishyzona a desert villag~ some thirty miles from Tucson Prior to his induction into the Army Sgt Melvin was an accountant associated with the New York office of Price Waterhouse amp Co He is still enshygaged in accounting activities being now the assistant to the Finance Officer at themiddot Marana base Capt D R Morgan 30 is with General McArthur and his troops in Australia

Names that yesterday made headlines on local sports pages are today laboring in patriotic anonymity to impart toughshyening physical training to the Army flyshyers of tomorrow On the roster of physhysical middot training instructors in the West Coast Army Air Forces Training Center Santa Ana California are men who made sports history Three former WSCers arc John Klumb 39 Domonic George 35 and Joseph J Koegler 29

Second Lieutenant Louis 1 Miller 38 to 41 was commissioned as an officer in the U S Army Air Force at the Lubbock Army Flying School Lubbock Texas on July 3 1942 After a period of primary training at Pine Bluff Arkansas Lt Milshyler went to Perrin Field Texas for basic instruction At the Lubbock Army Flying School one of the newest and biggest in Americas victory program his training was in the twin-engine bomber type of aircraft Captain and Mrs Glen K Smith 36 are now at Fort Sam Houston Texas where Captain Smith is in the Medical Department of the Service School at the Station Hospital He writes that he had a letter from Ed Goldsworthy 36 inshyforming him that Ed and Oscar Schoff had been promoted to the grade of captain and are on duty in Puerto Rico

From the rank of Second Lieutenant to Captain in six months is the jump that Charles W Hoffman 41 took He reshyceived his wings and was commissioned as 2nd Lt on December 13 1941 and received his Captaincy in June 1942 Neil Seehom 40 to 42 has gone to New London Conn to attend the coast guard academy there He gained his place by passing competitive examinations He was secretary of the Intercollegiate Knights in his sophomore year at college

WSC WOMEN PLAY THEIR PART

Lois E Hamilton 31 has been ordershyed to San Francisco from where she will leave for forei gn duty as Head Dietitian in the U S Army Her orders were to

take enough clothing for three years Dorothy Bussard 34 is in Des Moines Iowa as part of Washingtons contingent of 46 to receive training in the Womens Army Auxiliary Corps

Judith McWhorter 39 Yakima and Janet Oswalt 42 Wilbur are new memshybers of the Women Appointed for Volunshyteer Emergency Service-WAVES-and will begin training at Smith college Northampton Mass

Graduating with the first WAAC class at Fort Des Moines was Dorothy McshyLellan Sunnyside 1939 business adminisshytration graduate

Helen E Dare 37 Second Vice Presishydent of the W S C Alumni Association wrote on August 18

I have accepted a position as personshynel technician with the Air Force Comshymand which will keep me traveling throughout the United States I am sorry to have to give up my new position in the Alumni Association but perhaps I can sell the Cougars There are only 60 of these trained technicians in the counshytry and a group of us (5) ar e the first girls to be accepted for the position so we are thrilled about it all and are deshytermined to do a good job

~

How About A Letter When Rodney Bittner 41 sent in his

$150 for another years subscription to the POWWOW he sent this note along

Just thought I would take time out between Jap bombs to write a few lines My folks forward the magazine to me and I do enjoy it (when possible to get our mail)

Would it be possible to put a bit in it asking any of myoid friends (if any) to drop a line What mail we sailors receive is greatly appreciated I am doing medical work on board ship and at times am very busy

On April 18 1942 I received commisshysion in Naval Reserve as an Ensign Since first of 1941 have been on active duty in Navy in Medical Corp and still am Also went through the December 7 1941 blitz at Pearl Harbor and other naval battles Hope to be in Naval Reshysearch Lab before the year is over Would appreciate hearing from anybodY who remembers me Address is USS MEDUSA c-o Fleet Postmaster San Francisco California or home address is 5049 South Thompson Tacoma Washshyington

POWWOW September 184 6

From Hotel Manageshyment To Quarter Masters Corps

By Shirley Ingram

Quarter Masters Corps-the subsist shyence division and commissary work of the army and navy finds priority value in college students trained in Hotel Adshymanagement says Lieut Col William L Morrison acting commandant Washshyington State College Military Science and Tactics

What mans army or navy would not find a growing need for men trained in the principfes of food selection and prepshyaration to manage commissary units The hotel field has long ranked near the top in big business but today the need for college trained men is causing unshyprecedented growth

With roots firmly fixed in chemical scishyence and nutritional knowledge and with practical work done in the large quantity kitchens of the State College food unitsshythe butcher shop and the bakeshop at the Commons-with all this background and advanced ROTC training these stushydents will find the challenging appetites of soldiers in the line of duty

During the school year they are given experience in the Hotel Washington in Pullman where they work in many capashycities-practicing the theory of classshyrooms-ranging from bus boys to assist shyant chefs to desk clerks

In addition to fifteen major home ecoshynomics courses Hotel Administration students take a number of courses in the school of business administration to beshycome acquainted with methods of acshycounting Courses in economics money and banking business finance advertisshying business law and labor problems give them an additional background for their work and for handling Uncle Sams finances Other courses demandshying their complete knowledge are psyshychology aFchitecture plumbing and enshygineering personnel management and equipment engineering

Twelve outstanding hotel men of the Northwest have been selected as an adshyvisory committee to aid and direct in the

planning of the Hotel Administration course Mr Walter CHst Culmstock Arms Mr James A McCluskey Davenshyport Hotel and Mr Sam Jordon Sposhykane Mr Harry Gowman Gowman Hotel Mr Frank Hull Olympia Hotel Mr Harold Dupar and Mr Frank W Thurston New Washington Hotel Mr A J Barash Secretary of the Washingshyton State Hotel Association Seattle Mr Thad Pierce Hotel Olympia Olympia Mr Earl McInnes Hotel MultnomahbullPOWWOW September lUI

Portland Mr Guy Toombes Hotel Utah Salt Lake City and Mr Carl Morck Morck Hotel Aberdeen compose the committee

Spokane serves as the laboratory for field trips that are taken to give the stushydents first hand knowledge of hotels Affiliated with the Spokane Chapter No 8 of Hotel 6reeters of America a WSC Greeters Club has been formed by Hotel students

In cooperation with the Spokane chaRshyter speakers are brought to the college at various times to discuss present probshylems in the hotel field A $100 scholarshyship is awarded each year to an outshystanding junior by the Spokane Hotel Greeters

The following partial roster of gradushyates of the Hotel Administration course of the State College shows their place in the United States Army and Navy-Capshytain Ward Walker Recreation Center Fort Lewis Ensign Robert H Hoffman U S Navy Air Force Washington DC First Lt Earl Redlin Infantry Camp Roberts Calif First Lt Harry Lane Army Quartermaster Corps Riverside Calif Second Lt Deane Cooper Officer Sale School Air Corps Flying School Victorville Calif Maurice Youngs Air Corps Flying School Stockton Calif

Indeed the 1942 hotel-military students are finding a new line of defense and are being geared in an all out effort to do their part in the subsistence dishyvision

~ HOMECOMING 1941

Board of Directors Meetinit

Alumni registering

Football Outlook (Continued Irom Page Three)

center Bill Ward left guard Nick Susoeff right end Jay Stoves left halfback Fred Small quarter and Bob Kennedy fullback all of whom did outstanding work last autumn George Dyson and Jim Wright a pair of 225-pounders who saw considerashyble action as sophomores last year are the probable starters at tackle

Renfro Will Return

Dick Renfro boxcar back who stayed out of college last year after two seasons of fine varsity service is due to be back and will be assigned to the blocking quarterback post Tom Brannigan stocky guard of the last two years was moved to quarter durshying spring practice and is expected to remain there

Frank Akins hard-running twoshyyear veteran halfback who was out of school last year will be back and will probably see duty at right half instead of left Earl Brenneis who broke in as a sophomore last fall will also be at right half Frank Londos husky fuIIshyback vet will bolster the backfield

Other lettermen on the list include Buster Hollingbery center Rod Giske and Gene Arger guards Mel Holben and Bill Gustafson tackles Max Dodge end and Jim Boyle quartershyback

Good Soph Prospects

Up from last years freshmen Jelly Anderson end Harry Planck guard and Jim Thompson halfback are topshynotch varsity prospects Marv Walker junior college transfer is a capable performer at halfback while Gene Evans and Benton Bangs both backs Were reserves last year

Other sophomore candidates include Vern Oliver center Tom Parry and John Godfrey guards Rufus Boldshyman and Les Metzger tackles Ralph Thompson George Kitna and Wallace Kramer ends and Ron Waggoner fullback

~ Plan now to see the Cougars in action

on Homecoming October 3

7

NEEDED Addresses For These Missing Washington Staters

A constant effort is being made to keep track of State College alumni but despite the effort it becomes a real task to know just where everyone is located During the past year many lost alumni have been founel but others have dropped out of sight and the list remains about the same

We need your help I Check over the alumni listed in both the Long Lost and Newly Lost lists and let Us know if you have any addresses or information which would lead to addresses of these people You will find a form for returning this information on the next page Thank you

Newly Lost 1910 Imus Clifford C 1914 Foster Dean Edward 1916 Hart Stadden S 1917 Griffith Mrs George

(Irene Palmer) 1918 Goertzen Mrs J A

(Alma Anderson) Homme Olav H 19 19 Rees Florence M Cutler Clarence W 1920 Brooks Mrs Juanita Ridenaur Horace Stam Dr -Edward L 192 3 Hollingsworth Walter M 192 4 Greenberg Nathan Lavin William A Williams Earl A bull Wooddy Mrs Edith L 192 5 Casey Sister Maureen Gage Kenneth McKillip William A Vincent Mrs Walter E

(Jennie Secrest) 1926 Wilfong Mrs J L

(Gladys Gue) 192 7 Mueller Vivian 1 Olson Emanuel Wilson Harry K 1928 Graham Lola Vivien Johnson Kenneth R Miller William A 1929 Yuni Richard V 1930 Osterman Mrs Leo

(Ana N egoescu) Pittman Chester Allen Swartz Helen Jane 1931 Rowland Katharine 1932 Guisleman George V Oien Gustav T middot Pohlman H Kingsley 1933 Henderson Earl L Van Doren Winifred M 1934 Jackson Virgil M Matthews John S Richey Loran P Wilson William F 1936 Agee James R Stewart Lorne J W Talcott Robert Van Patten

8

1937 Marlatt Leigh R 1938 McCabe Mrs Burton

(Helen Wersen) Siepman Richard D 1939 Tomita Junichi 1940 Ross Earle R 1941 Atkin Shirlen E Byers Doris V Fernandez Cipriana C Zier Ruth Lillian 1942 Ashton Willard H Hoop Jay Dee Jasper Dr Donald E Robinson LeRoy D

Long Lost 1899 Larkin Charles T 1900 Anderson John Frank Brown Peter

1903 Wallis William Alden 1~04 Carter Emily Barker Foster Sidney F 1906 McKenzie Frank William 1907 Andrews Mrs Maude C Bryant Roy E Grice Mrs Otto (Florence

Knepper) 1908 Baddeley Dr Joseph Clarence Burg Mrs Walter A (Myrtle

Boyles) Simmons John Leslie Wilson Frank E Woods Tony W

(f~fi Clarence E Kelly Edna Rosene Laird Marple Everett Miller Claude A Smith Virgil Rodney Talbot Charles William 19 10 Bobeau Lucius McClellan Limon Gregorio ~II Couch Dr Otto Justin Maeda Teruzo Marston William Ray Rogers Jessie B Strickler Clair H 1912 Reeder George Kingsburg Sands Olea M Warwick Mrs Preston (Mary

Mann) 1913 Craner Albert E Creveling Alfred Benjamin Gaddis Dee Kirsch Karl

Knapp Harold Stanford Leavitt Clarence Ashton 1914 Almen Herman Victor Long Delbert C Meyer Henry William Newman Mrs Pauline Davis

(Pauline Davis) Rodgers Roliert Julius Spiers Archibald L C Wilson Philip Guy 191 5 Brown Stonewall Koppen Walter J McCormick Francis Howard Ney John Henry Platt Mrs Philip S Anette

Nicholl) Puckett Thomas C Stendquist Lender L 1916 Batts Bertha A McLaughlin George Swanson Swen Arthur Van Horn Bower 1917 Baker Adolph Irvin Greene Mrs W H C (Chrismiddot

tine M Wood)Humphrey Homer W Jeffrey Blanche C Luce Dr Harry C Miller Aubrey C Richardson Elizabeth Roach Mrs C M (Etl)a Batts)Russell Fred Lawrence Sato Jachi Sato Shinijiro Todd Paul Edward 19 1 8 Boyle Margaret Croonquistz Mrs Hugh A

(Helen T Holroyd)Ewing Clarence Charles Krafft E Gertrude Sisseau Mrs Fred G (Ora

Mabel Hickman)Smith Mrs Charlotte Robinson Traeger LeRoy Edwin

1919 Beck Esther LydiaJudges Bertha rhistlewaite Garnet VirgilWhitford Richard W

1920 Brett Matie DorothyBrooks Bert Edgar Mary Charlotte Henderson Winfield Lester Martin Harrison G McAninch Mrs Marion E

(Evelyn N Bradbury)Moore Gladys B Riviere Mrs Frank (Suzanne

M Moinard)Sera Sei Ropion Yvonne GeorgetteRitchie Helen Mae Seyer Mary Emily Shroll Walter Scott Shaw Robert L Stam Dr Edward Lockwood Stanton Will ClydeTainaka Ben Katsumi Valdivieso Fausto Wright Geraldine Ziegler Adolph

1921 Bartruff John A Black Mrs Van Nest (Mry

Todd Hodges) Collins Homer Arthur Fitch Mrs Clara

(Clara Hefty) Holmes Edna Alice Isamu Inouye Kruger John Henry Lyse Alvin Theodore Lytle Nelson Edwin Medby Arthur Moodhe David Herbert Muir Esther Davidson Myers Earl H Newland Mrs Ruth H

(Charles J) Rinehart John Marshall Street Mrs Julian

(Marguerite Skibeness) Taggert David Vander Heyden Joseph Wm M Watzek Peter Whitman Mrs Lorna Longwell 1922 Belknap Clifford Vernon Carr Mildred Irene Chamberlain Lowell Colby Phillip Henry Fox Heggmaier Caroline

Kee Mrs W H (Loree Whitney)

Patrick James G Pohl Clara Mildred Robin Lyla Josephine Watson James Winkler Stanley C 192 3 Bessette Josephine A Byrnes Eleanor Dunegan Irvin Ferguson Dewitt Talmage French Olive Bell Hansen Arthur Caleb Ideno Harry H Ishiyama Eiitsu Kidnay Katherine Page Carroll Gordon Taylor Harry Albert Zimmerman Ernest Theodore 1924 Barnes Ralph Howard Carlile Dallas Elijah Howard Henry R Johnson Merrit H Liu Min Chang Messenger William P Reese Chester G Simmons Mrs Estella J Snodgrass Milton Dean Steiner Marie Anne TeeGarden Mrs Lewis

(Alice Prindle) Westbrook John Lewis

192 5 Andes Mrs James O

(Esther Crawford) Campbell John Gordon Chandler Norman Edwards Ruth Harbeck Glenn C Hibbard Lorin G Hinton Paul Johnson Askel Herbert Kerr H Catherine Moore Margaret Newton George A Skinner Mrs Robert

(Eva Nordin) Smith Edward N White Mary Anieta Yasuda Masao

1926 Ballantyne Helen Man Coberly Dwight Crane Esther Lenore Davenport Earle Glenn Fisher William Alonzo Gillis Ewen Hess Mildred Eula Johnson Dr Walford Joseph Kreider Anna C Lapp Paul Alfred McIntire Aileen Olive Naggy Steve Norton Alice Augusta Owen Roy Martin Walker Clarence Wright Walton Edward Deane Mamie Engstrom Alva Carl Gudger Bessie Leona Johnson Frank J Largent Harry E Logan Mrs Hugh L

(Ethel Dora Keevy) McGucken Edward G Nakagawa Taniji Harry Nelson James Ade Okui James Jito Purnell Orien Virgil Sievers Mrs George

(Nelle V Jones) Smith David J Westbrook Mrs Jane Howe Worlds Clarence H

1928 Bennett Lawrence M Kowal Joe Lee Chite Meeker Herbert L Olson Esther Louise Taylor James Eldon Wilkie Mildred LaVelle

1929 Aquino Antonio Quesada Connolly Pat Wlliam Dial Mabel Jacobson Keener John Burton Jr Lester Viola G McFarland Mrs Marion Bush Lew Mi Ryan Mrs William C

(Maxine Damrell) Scranton Idol N Stevenson Robert S VanBossche Leonard

lowwow September 1141

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbull bullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1930 Allison James Frank Bailey Mrs Lyman N

(Helen Bolitho)Fang Tsung Han Donald Lewis Fox Hennessy Mary Lemmia Lavett AntollY Eustace Long F Cecil Olson Ruth Wilamena Platter John Laurence Ralph Harry Robert Roberts Mary Elizabeth Schirmer Evalyne Carolyn Steelman Julien Randolph Veldee Mrs R Marie

1931 Abey Lester E Chun William B Fuller David Thomas Fulmer Fred Roy McCall Harriett Irene Mahoney Alice Madelon Nelson M Maxine Schimelpfenig Clyde F Wilson James Walker

1932 Braganza Bonifacio B Carlson Oscar Theodore Gage Frank Henry Kaylor Raymond Doyle Meyers Merton Isabelle Micu Genenato Realin Miyota Nathaniel Susumu Noel James P Nyuha Bert K Padua Andrew M Suguitan Eustaquio Abella

1933 Corner Harold A Howland Alice Katherine Imes Eva Carol Layos Robert D Miller Monroe Eugene Ysui Yung Chi Young JeChun

1934 ~Balatero Jose Ancheta Galbraith Robert Donald ~ Herren Mary Peyton Hsu Pin Ling ~ Hytpwitz Lawrence David Leonard James Thomas ~ Little Myrtle Louise Ramos Inocencio Raguine ~ Scott Edward Rodney ~1935 ~ Dunbar Alver Herrold Dwight Elmer Jones Del E Lundberg Bert OmiddotShea Bill S Pontesso Leonard Arthur Stewart Daniel R Stewart Everett Earle Lyle E Tompkins

1936 Burns David Robert Carter Daniel Melvin Clnk Herbert Edward Elson Miss Vinnie Haynes Laird H Jewell Charles Arthur Rhine Duhois Clarence

1937 Holmes Richard Arthur Hougen Esther Larson Joseph B Snodgrass Jack H

1938 Akers Margaret M Dawley Muriel E Jones Juanita Sexton Ormsbee Richard Armstrong Smith Harold Gus Tamura Yoshio

1939 Black Richard Clark Burton Sydney Leonard Stubbs James W Nelson Howard Edmond Palafox Anastacio Laida Wooten Clyde Curtis

94 Cook Albert Thomas Jessup Ellen Clara

POWWOW September 1941

The LOST Are Found Alumni Office 211 Adminstration Building Pullman Washington

Gentlement Id like to report the following round-up of alumni on your Lost list

(signed) Name __

Address

Name Class

Address __ _ _ _

Lead to gt[ address __

Narne _ Class _

Address _ - - ____

Lead to get address ~~____

Name _ Class ___

Address ______

Lead to get address - - - -__

Narne _ Class _

Address

Lead to get address ~-

s~- _- Class __

Lead to get address ~- --- -

I Alumni Records There is increasing need for a mondeg complete record of Washington State Alumni

To this end your Alumni Office has searched all possible college records and has also received a very few personal data records from individuals This form will give your Alumni Office the essential informlltion which it needs from you Please accommoshydate us by filling it out and returning it with the halance of this page Thank you

Narne _ Class Degree _

Business firm - Position

Residence address shy

Date of birth Where - shy

Married on To yen bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Who attended (College) __ Class

Children (ages and names) ~

--------------_---------------------_-----------------------_------------------_------------------------_--___-----__shy

War record - - yen

Extra-curricular activity since leaving College (public offices clubs honors etc)

--- ------------------------------ ~__-- ----__-_ _____-__-__-_--_ ____----

_---_ _------__ ----------_--__----_______ ___--_--_-----_---____ shy

If you have not already submitted one we should like a recent photograph of yourshyself for our biographical file

9

The right minded alumnus can do much to keep the institution in a right In This Alumni Worldlight before the citizens of the state upon which it must depend for supshyport H e is in a sense its advertising agency If he gets Oltt of touch or out of sympathy with his Alma Mater she thereby suffers a great loss

-Thomas Arkle Clark Long-time Dean of Men Univ of Illinois

NEW LIFE MEMBERS JULY AND AUGUST

H H WAITE 26

BERT S NORLING 26

COL HAROLD G HOLT 15

l1R AND MRS ALLEN MANRING 32

1910 Walter E Rutherford is the owner of Rutherfords Pharmacy in Oakesdale Washington

1923 Mrs Alfred C Schy (Ora West) is living at Lamont Washington The Westss have three children Alfred Lee 6 Alan 4 and Marjorie Jane 2

1924 Mr and Mrs Dorcy D Nog1ey (Ida Hedborg) have one son born March 24 1939 They live at 684 Highland Avenue Glen Ellyn Illinois

1926 J F Gates is Property Officer and Comshypany Quarter Master at Camp Lee Vir-

How To Be A Member In Good Standing of the WSC Alumni

Association Its easy

You send cash money order or check amounting to $150 to the Alumni Office In return you receive a years subscription to the POWWOW official publication of the association printed ten times each year

Now that its on your mind why dont you - this minute - fill out the blank below and join an organization that is growing every day

Life Membership in the organization including years POWWOW $500

Name Class

Address City State

Please find $ for a years membership in the Association

Please bill me for the same amount on c and start sending POWWOW now

ginia He is an Entomologist

Mr and Mrs Harrie O Bohlke are livshying at 9547 - 24th Street N W Seattle Mr Bohlke is in the Industrial Departshyment of the Seattle Chamoer of Comshymerce From 1934 to 1941 he was the chief inspector for the Washington State Rignor Control Board and in 1939 he was in the Grand Lodge of BPOE

1927 Dr Harold Weatherman is a Pediatrician at the Rees-Stealy Clinic in San Diego California He lives at 3531 Arnold Ave

1928 James T Pringle is in the transportation Sales Department of Westinghouse Elecshytric and Manufacturing Company and lives at No 16 - 575 South Negley Aveshynue Pittsburgh Pennsylvania He and his wife (Margaret Palmer x 31) have a 20-month-old baby girl Helen

1930 Clifford E Long is in the United States

Employment Service as Manager and is ~ living at Hood River Oregon He is married and has two children In Janushyi ary 1940 he was given a medical disshy charge from the army with the rank of

Lieutenant At present he is a re-emshy_ ployment committeeman and works on the Selective Service System

Mrs Gara1d L Dixon (Helen Casey) lives at N 5111 Stone Street Bonners Ferry Idaho and has two children Carol Ann 10 and Jane Ellen 8 Mr and Mrs N Harold Squier are living at 850 Sunnyside Chicago Illinois with their nine-year-old daughter Nancy Maria Mr Squier is the training supershyvisor of the Commonwealth Edison and is acting as a teacher and worker in Civilian Defense

1931 Dr Esther M Roehr lives with her Docshytor husband at 903 E John Seattle They have two children Sandra Marie and Karen Eppa Stanley Ray is office nurse and anesthetist for Dr ] F Scott Surgeon in Yakima Washington She and her husband Dr Kenneth C Ray live at 213 N 24th Avenue Yakima Mr and Mrs Leonard W Swanson are living at Eatonville Washington The Swansons have two children Donald Alan 4 and Richard Lennart 1

1933 A Wilfred Welch is the Asst Engineer in the U S Engineer Dept at Eugene Oregon The Mr and Mrs (Verna C Robinson 32) live at 1380 Villord Street with Nancy Gayl their daughter

POWWOW September lUI 10

1934 Dr Marlowe Dittebrandt is a practicing physician in Portland Oregon She lives at the Heathman Hotel Her business adshydress is Room 212 Studio Building

1935 Alfred S Cleveland has been the Adshyministrative Assistant in the U S Deshypartment of Agriculture at Harvard Unishyversity Cambridge Mass In June howshyever he was called into active duty as a Lieutenant (JG) in the U S N R

1936 Rolf B Jorgensen is the Assistant Range Examiner of the U S Forest Service at Saint Anthony Idaho He married Doroshythy L Welch x31 in 1938 and they have one daughter almost two years old

Pauline Thomas is the P E and Health Teacher in the Seattle Public Schools and lives at 1019 Terry Avenue

1937 The chief wine chemist at the Gibson Wine Company in Fort Mitchell Kenshytucky is Wilbur Zeve1y whose address is Rivard Drive Dixie Highway

Robert E Click is Sanitarian in the Yakishyma City-County Health Dept He was treasurer of the Western Washington Dairy Technology Assn during 1941shy1942 406 South 27th Avenue Yakima Washington will reach him

~

Letters From Alums (Continued from Page Four)

Captain Claire Langley 36 sent in this letter to the alumni office recently from the Hawaiian Islands Captain Langleys address is 161st Infantry C O Service Co APO 25 coo P M San Francisco California

Pehea Oe

You see Im getting akamai Hawaiian isnt spoken much but the names are sure nani-if you say em right Its Ho no 100 100 not Hannah Loo lah That makes the kamaaina huhu and pegs you for a malihini And put a soft e on the end of Hawaii like this Hah weye e Thats no pilikia Now that youve had your language lesson Ill tell you someshything about the people and their islands The Hawaiian wahines are beautiful and their kane big and friendly And when they tell me Hele mai e ai they dont have to say that again I just answed Mahalo nui and move right in

Their best work though is Aloha

POWWOW SepCember lUI

Youll find it at the end of this letter But it means much more than just goodshybye Its Hello Love to You Good Morning How ya doing-any kind of a pleasant greeting And if a Hawaiian replies Aloha no believe it not he means Aloha yes Some newcomers get their Hawaiian all mixed up One pupule tourist wrote home that he was sitting on a lei with a lanai round his neck

Whats cookin Maybe a hukilau folshylowed by a big luau Hawaiians bake puaa with vegetables in an underground oven I ts some kaukau Your opu sure sticks out after all that fresh pineapple poi and fish-including one little feller they call humuhumunukunukuapuaa No wonder they say the language has vowel trouble at a lua a keikikane will walk right up an cocopalm in his bare feet and toss you down nuts to drink out of And then theyll shred the leaves and weave you a papale The hula dancers with pua in their hair sure go to town in fresh ti-Ieaf skirts and red muumuu They even put jitter-bugging in the shade And thats no hoopunipuni

But the deal here is surfing at Waikiki Riding a surfboard is a kick but takes practice Ill do mine in an outrigger canoe with a Hawaiian steering When he hollers Huki its lucky that old blue sea is wela for you certainly take a wetshyting as you toboggan down a huge wave Some thrill And no hele wawae back

For directions in Hawaii they tell you to go mauka or makai-thats to the mountains or toward the sea When you Go for broke its called welakahao If you cant understand all this letter look in the corner Thats a good start and when I learn some more Ill write you wikiwiki Good-bye now

Aloha nui

Signed Claire Langley

Helpful hints Pehea oe-Howre you Akamal-clever Nani-beautilul Huhu-angry Kamaalna-old timer lIaJlhini-newcomer Pilika-trouble Wahine-woman Kane-man Hele mal e ai-come In and eat Mahalo nul-thanks Pupule-looney Lei-garland Lanai-verandah Hukilau-net fishing Luau-feast Kelki-kane-boy Puaa-plg Kaukau-food Opu-stomach Papale-hat Pua-flower Muumuu-waist Hoopunlpun-lIe Huki-pull Wela-warm Hele wawae-walk Nul-big Wlklwlkl--quck

in other word Ity JOHN CLINTON

I As the His-CEE pano-Plymshy

outhandI bull grow old toshy~ gether my reshy

s12ect for the old bus inshycreases I think

when at last the war is over and new cars are once more availshyable Ill keep the H-P and have it stuffed

For example the other day one of the Union 011 engineers told me that If the speed of my enshygine were not reduced by the transmission and differential the H-P1ymouth would travel at something like 240 miles per houri Wowl

I never knew

before just tpMwhat the transshymission and _ differential ~ were for But it turns out that they tame the power generated by your engine and apply it in tableshyspoonfuls to the wheels And incidentally theyre two vital departments of your car

The transmission has something like 54 separate parts whizzing around Inside a sealed box It takes special lubricant that will withstand extreme high presshysure to lubricate that stuff 4nd If you let It go more than 5000 miles youre taking chances

Its too technical to explain in this space (even if I could do itl) but if you drive without proper lubricant in the T amp D a very unpleasant thing will hap pen The transmission will fOWl at you and the differentia will huml And once they start theyll never stop til you put in new expensive gears

So start now to have your Union Minute Mencheckyour transmission and differenshytial for you Theyll keep

a~curate records of when the service Is due and notify you to come In But-dont take chance All you get Is a noisy carl

1942 Washington State Football Schedule

Sept 26 Stanford T bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull Palo Alto Oct 3 OREGON Pullman

(Homecoming) Oct 10 MONTANA _ Pullman

(Dads Day) Oct 17 U S C Los Angeles Oct 24 O S C Portland Oct 31 Open Nov 7 Michigan State Spokane Nov 14 Idaho Tmiddotmiddotmiddot bullbullbullbull bull bullbullbullbull bull bullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull Moscow Nov 21 2nd Air Force Spokane Nov 28 Washington Seattle Dec 5 Texas A amp M San Antonio

FRESHMAN SCHEDULE Oct 31 Eastern Washington

College of Education~Pullman Nov 6 Idaho _ Moscow Nov 14 Washington Pullman

For tickets or information write or call OFFICE OF THE GRADUATE

MANAGER State College of Washington

Pullman Washington Telephone 1281

TICKET PRICES

HOMECOMING GAME

Goal to Goal $150

End Zone T 90

High School 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

DADS DAY

Goal to Goal $115

End Zone middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot T 75

High School _ 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

~iJkf

Page 5: ~T rllJJlJll1J P!lWW!lW

CAMPUS HITS AND MISSES The American Alumni Council of

which the WSC Alumni Association is a member has proven its worth once again The AAC has just completed an arrangement with the War Departshyment whereby all their members will receive the name and address of every alumnus of their school who goes into the army-and within one week of his induction

~ The new Army Civilian Pilot Trainshy

ing Course is going forward with flyshying colors The 20 trainees are on the job 12 hours a day and have few idle minutes according to Prof Robert S Neilson military instructor athletic director and coordinator The daily schedule begins with calisthenics at 5 30 followed by flight training at the airport during the mori-ting Military drill and classroom instruction occushypy the afternoon and early evening The men now in training will complete their elementary work in eight weeks and then advance to secondary trainshying so that a new group can be started

~ The seven-semester reign as scholarshy

ship queens of the Washington State campus has ended for Kappa Alpha Theta national sorority when they were forced into second place by Alshypha Gamma Delta national sorority in the group scholastic standings for the spring semester announces Regisshytrar Frank T Barnard In third place is Maple Cottage trailed by Pi Beta Phi national sorority only 01 of a point below

Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity headed the mens group for the fourth consecutive time with an average of 8634 foIlowed by Acacia fraternity and Waller Hall

~ Three promotions have been made

on the ROTC staff at WSC Captain Howard H House has been promoted to the rank of major First Lieutenshyants George L Converse and Jerry D Naimy have gone one step up and are now wearing captains bars

powwow September 1841

Eleven different languages are the achievement of the nine soldiers now studying the Japanese language under the direction of Rev~rend John Cobb Spokane pastor Their classes are being held in CoIlege Hall Besides their language accomplishments which include fluent use of Hebrew Greek Sioux Indian Latin Portugese and Armenian as well as French Spanish Italian German and Polish these men may boast of representing almost every section of the United States They came from Massachusetts N~w York Wisconsin Illinois Kentucky Florida Texas South Dakota and Washington

Lt Howard Greer The Navy has called Lt Greer from his Publicity Directors desk in the Graduate Managers Office He is now in Rhode Island

The occupations of these men before they started military service indicate that there is much versatility among army men Ten weeks ago one of them was a footbaIl and basketball

coach and a professional boxer anshyother was a night club operator before he volunteered his services in May The others were in occupations such as operator of a soap business a deshypartment of health laboratory technishycian an accountant an assistant to a museum director and middot a student at Hamilton College

The Pullman-WSC stocking drive was a great success The silk hose will be sent to the Orient by the American Bureau for Medical Aid to China There they will be used as bandages for injured Chinese soldiers in the Asiatic war zones Mrs Robert S Neilson lead among individual conshytributors as she offered 56 stockings to the drive

~ The Phi Kappa Alpha house won

the $250 prize offered to the group on the campus for the best essay on The Use of Washington Lumber Prodshyucts The West Coast Lumbermans Association sponsored the contest on both this campus and the University of Washington campus Raymond Ellis and Carl Henry wrote the essay that won the prize on this campus

Leroy Bradbury ASSCW President

ASSCW Loses Officers Presidentshyelect Marvin Gilberg (Greek) has reshysigned both the ASSCW presidency and the co-captaincy of the basketball team to enter University of California Dental School in San Francisco Wilshyma Richardson (Independent) camshypus beauty was elected ASSCW Secshyretary but writes she wont be on the campus this year either The engageshyment of these two was announced this summer Could be somethings a going on but we wouldnt be a knowing shyyet

Bruce Bruchler who was elected Independent Junior Man on the Board of Control writes that he is now servshying Uncle Sam at Fort Douglas Utah so wont be back

Leroy Bradbury (Independent) will step up from the Vice-Presidents chair to take the reigns of the Associshyated Students this fall His first job will be to fill the other vacancies in his Board of Control

5

COUGARS IN THE SERVICE Three Washington State College alumshy

ni have been advanced to the rank of brigadier general it was announced by the war department

They are Lowell W Brooks 17 proshymoted from colonel infantry July 31 1942 Joseph L Philips 14 promoted from colonel cavalry July 28 1942 now assigned to army group Washington DC and S Lusker McCroskey 16 proshymoted from colonel coast artillery corps June 24 1942

Also listed by the department was a partial list containing names of seven WSC alumni who are now colonels and three who are lieutenant colonels in the United States service

Those listed as colonels were Arthur O Walsh 17 finance department (see write-up in June POWWOW) R H Back 18 infantry M V Fortier 16 ordinance department R M ODay 15 infantry now in the Pacific theater of war Harold G Holt 15 cavalry on duty with armored division (see write-up in June POWWOW) and William A Wapshypenstein 20 infantry who is on duty at a foreign station

The Lieutenant colonels were Hubert S Miller 21 corps of engineers Stanley M Nevin 25 veterinary corps now on duty at a foreign station and Cal Phillips 33 who is post adjutant at Randolph Field Texas and who formerly was WSC Alumni Secretary

Washington State College students who were graduated in class 42-F from Enid Army Flying School Oklahoma were Jack E Turner (1936-41) and Clark O Cordill (1935-40) Aviation Cadet Turshyner went to the Air Corps Advanced Flyshying School Lake Charles La and Aviashytion Cadet Cordill to the Air Corps Advanced Flying School Mission Texas Lt Bill Ambrosius 40 has been in the Phillipines and Java flying bombers He is now in Australia where he is a Finance Officer Censor Officer and Squadron Adjutant Ed Zydowsky freshman footshyball and baseball player in 1937 is in the army at Camp Grant Illinois playing on the baseball team In a game versus the Chanute Field baseball team the other day Ed hit one of the longest home runs ever seen in those parts

The promotion of Woodson Bennett 38 from the rank of First Lieutenant to that of Captain in the Medical Corps United States Army was announced by headquarters of the Medical Field Service School Carlisle Barracks Pa where Captain Bennett is an instructor in the Officer Candidate School Staff Sergeant

Howard R Melvin Jr 37 has been transferred to the Army Air Forces new Basic Flying School near Marana Arishyzona a desert villag~ some thirty miles from Tucson Prior to his induction into the Army Sgt Melvin was an accountant associated with the New York office of Price Waterhouse amp Co He is still enshygaged in accounting activities being now the assistant to the Finance Officer at themiddot Marana base Capt D R Morgan 30 is with General McArthur and his troops in Australia

Names that yesterday made headlines on local sports pages are today laboring in patriotic anonymity to impart toughshyening physical training to the Army flyshyers of tomorrow On the roster of physhysical middot training instructors in the West Coast Army Air Forces Training Center Santa Ana California are men who made sports history Three former WSCers arc John Klumb 39 Domonic George 35 and Joseph J Koegler 29

Second Lieutenant Louis 1 Miller 38 to 41 was commissioned as an officer in the U S Army Air Force at the Lubbock Army Flying School Lubbock Texas on July 3 1942 After a period of primary training at Pine Bluff Arkansas Lt Milshyler went to Perrin Field Texas for basic instruction At the Lubbock Army Flying School one of the newest and biggest in Americas victory program his training was in the twin-engine bomber type of aircraft Captain and Mrs Glen K Smith 36 are now at Fort Sam Houston Texas where Captain Smith is in the Medical Department of the Service School at the Station Hospital He writes that he had a letter from Ed Goldsworthy 36 inshyforming him that Ed and Oscar Schoff had been promoted to the grade of captain and are on duty in Puerto Rico

From the rank of Second Lieutenant to Captain in six months is the jump that Charles W Hoffman 41 took He reshyceived his wings and was commissioned as 2nd Lt on December 13 1941 and received his Captaincy in June 1942 Neil Seehom 40 to 42 has gone to New London Conn to attend the coast guard academy there He gained his place by passing competitive examinations He was secretary of the Intercollegiate Knights in his sophomore year at college

WSC WOMEN PLAY THEIR PART

Lois E Hamilton 31 has been ordershyed to San Francisco from where she will leave for forei gn duty as Head Dietitian in the U S Army Her orders were to

take enough clothing for three years Dorothy Bussard 34 is in Des Moines Iowa as part of Washingtons contingent of 46 to receive training in the Womens Army Auxiliary Corps

Judith McWhorter 39 Yakima and Janet Oswalt 42 Wilbur are new memshybers of the Women Appointed for Volunshyteer Emergency Service-WAVES-and will begin training at Smith college Northampton Mass

Graduating with the first WAAC class at Fort Des Moines was Dorothy McshyLellan Sunnyside 1939 business adminisshytration graduate

Helen E Dare 37 Second Vice Presishydent of the W S C Alumni Association wrote on August 18

I have accepted a position as personshynel technician with the Air Force Comshymand which will keep me traveling throughout the United States I am sorry to have to give up my new position in the Alumni Association but perhaps I can sell the Cougars There are only 60 of these trained technicians in the counshytry and a group of us (5) ar e the first girls to be accepted for the position so we are thrilled about it all and are deshytermined to do a good job

~

How About A Letter When Rodney Bittner 41 sent in his

$150 for another years subscription to the POWWOW he sent this note along

Just thought I would take time out between Jap bombs to write a few lines My folks forward the magazine to me and I do enjoy it (when possible to get our mail)

Would it be possible to put a bit in it asking any of myoid friends (if any) to drop a line What mail we sailors receive is greatly appreciated I am doing medical work on board ship and at times am very busy

On April 18 1942 I received commisshysion in Naval Reserve as an Ensign Since first of 1941 have been on active duty in Navy in Medical Corp and still am Also went through the December 7 1941 blitz at Pearl Harbor and other naval battles Hope to be in Naval Reshysearch Lab before the year is over Would appreciate hearing from anybodY who remembers me Address is USS MEDUSA c-o Fleet Postmaster San Francisco California or home address is 5049 South Thompson Tacoma Washshyington

POWWOW September 184 6

From Hotel Manageshyment To Quarter Masters Corps

By Shirley Ingram

Quarter Masters Corps-the subsist shyence division and commissary work of the army and navy finds priority value in college students trained in Hotel Adshymanagement says Lieut Col William L Morrison acting commandant Washshyington State College Military Science and Tactics

What mans army or navy would not find a growing need for men trained in the principfes of food selection and prepshyaration to manage commissary units The hotel field has long ranked near the top in big business but today the need for college trained men is causing unshyprecedented growth

With roots firmly fixed in chemical scishyence and nutritional knowledge and with practical work done in the large quantity kitchens of the State College food unitsshythe butcher shop and the bakeshop at the Commons-with all this background and advanced ROTC training these stushydents will find the challenging appetites of soldiers in the line of duty

During the school year they are given experience in the Hotel Washington in Pullman where they work in many capashycities-practicing the theory of classshyrooms-ranging from bus boys to assist shyant chefs to desk clerks

In addition to fifteen major home ecoshynomics courses Hotel Administration students take a number of courses in the school of business administration to beshycome acquainted with methods of acshycounting Courses in economics money and banking business finance advertisshying business law and labor problems give them an additional background for their work and for handling Uncle Sams finances Other courses demandshying their complete knowledge are psyshychology aFchitecture plumbing and enshygineering personnel management and equipment engineering

Twelve outstanding hotel men of the Northwest have been selected as an adshyvisory committee to aid and direct in the

planning of the Hotel Administration course Mr Walter CHst Culmstock Arms Mr James A McCluskey Davenshyport Hotel and Mr Sam Jordon Sposhykane Mr Harry Gowman Gowman Hotel Mr Frank Hull Olympia Hotel Mr Harold Dupar and Mr Frank W Thurston New Washington Hotel Mr A J Barash Secretary of the Washingshyton State Hotel Association Seattle Mr Thad Pierce Hotel Olympia Olympia Mr Earl McInnes Hotel MultnomahbullPOWWOW September lUI

Portland Mr Guy Toombes Hotel Utah Salt Lake City and Mr Carl Morck Morck Hotel Aberdeen compose the committee

Spokane serves as the laboratory for field trips that are taken to give the stushydents first hand knowledge of hotels Affiliated with the Spokane Chapter No 8 of Hotel 6reeters of America a WSC Greeters Club has been formed by Hotel students

In cooperation with the Spokane chaRshyter speakers are brought to the college at various times to discuss present probshylems in the hotel field A $100 scholarshyship is awarded each year to an outshystanding junior by the Spokane Hotel Greeters

The following partial roster of gradushyates of the Hotel Administration course of the State College shows their place in the United States Army and Navy-Capshytain Ward Walker Recreation Center Fort Lewis Ensign Robert H Hoffman U S Navy Air Force Washington DC First Lt Earl Redlin Infantry Camp Roberts Calif First Lt Harry Lane Army Quartermaster Corps Riverside Calif Second Lt Deane Cooper Officer Sale School Air Corps Flying School Victorville Calif Maurice Youngs Air Corps Flying School Stockton Calif

Indeed the 1942 hotel-military students are finding a new line of defense and are being geared in an all out effort to do their part in the subsistence dishyvision

~ HOMECOMING 1941

Board of Directors Meetinit

Alumni registering

Football Outlook (Continued Irom Page Three)

center Bill Ward left guard Nick Susoeff right end Jay Stoves left halfback Fred Small quarter and Bob Kennedy fullback all of whom did outstanding work last autumn George Dyson and Jim Wright a pair of 225-pounders who saw considerashyble action as sophomores last year are the probable starters at tackle

Renfro Will Return

Dick Renfro boxcar back who stayed out of college last year after two seasons of fine varsity service is due to be back and will be assigned to the blocking quarterback post Tom Brannigan stocky guard of the last two years was moved to quarter durshying spring practice and is expected to remain there

Frank Akins hard-running twoshyyear veteran halfback who was out of school last year will be back and will probably see duty at right half instead of left Earl Brenneis who broke in as a sophomore last fall will also be at right half Frank Londos husky fuIIshyback vet will bolster the backfield

Other lettermen on the list include Buster Hollingbery center Rod Giske and Gene Arger guards Mel Holben and Bill Gustafson tackles Max Dodge end and Jim Boyle quartershyback

Good Soph Prospects

Up from last years freshmen Jelly Anderson end Harry Planck guard and Jim Thompson halfback are topshynotch varsity prospects Marv Walker junior college transfer is a capable performer at halfback while Gene Evans and Benton Bangs both backs Were reserves last year

Other sophomore candidates include Vern Oliver center Tom Parry and John Godfrey guards Rufus Boldshyman and Les Metzger tackles Ralph Thompson George Kitna and Wallace Kramer ends and Ron Waggoner fullback

~ Plan now to see the Cougars in action

on Homecoming October 3

7

NEEDED Addresses For These Missing Washington Staters

A constant effort is being made to keep track of State College alumni but despite the effort it becomes a real task to know just where everyone is located During the past year many lost alumni have been founel but others have dropped out of sight and the list remains about the same

We need your help I Check over the alumni listed in both the Long Lost and Newly Lost lists and let Us know if you have any addresses or information which would lead to addresses of these people You will find a form for returning this information on the next page Thank you

Newly Lost 1910 Imus Clifford C 1914 Foster Dean Edward 1916 Hart Stadden S 1917 Griffith Mrs George

(Irene Palmer) 1918 Goertzen Mrs J A

(Alma Anderson) Homme Olav H 19 19 Rees Florence M Cutler Clarence W 1920 Brooks Mrs Juanita Ridenaur Horace Stam Dr -Edward L 192 3 Hollingsworth Walter M 192 4 Greenberg Nathan Lavin William A Williams Earl A bull Wooddy Mrs Edith L 192 5 Casey Sister Maureen Gage Kenneth McKillip William A Vincent Mrs Walter E

(Jennie Secrest) 1926 Wilfong Mrs J L

(Gladys Gue) 192 7 Mueller Vivian 1 Olson Emanuel Wilson Harry K 1928 Graham Lola Vivien Johnson Kenneth R Miller William A 1929 Yuni Richard V 1930 Osterman Mrs Leo

(Ana N egoescu) Pittman Chester Allen Swartz Helen Jane 1931 Rowland Katharine 1932 Guisleman George V Oien Gustav T middot Pohlman H Kingsley 1933 Henderson Earl L Van Doren Winifred M 1934 Jackson Virgil M Matthews John S Richey Loran P Wilson William F 1936 Agee James R Stewart Lorne J W Talcott Robert Van Patten

8

1937 Marlatt Leigh R 1938 McCabe Mrs Burton

(Helen Wersen) Siepman Richard D 1939 Tomita Junichi 1940 Ross Earle R 1941 Atkin Shirlen E Byers Doris V Fernandez Cipriana C Zier Ruth Lillian 1942 Ashton Willard H Hoop Jay Dee Jasper Dr Donald E Robinson LeRoy D

Long Lost 1899 Larkin Charles T 1900 Anderson John Frank Brown Peter

1903 Wallis William Alden 1~04 Carter Emily Barker Foster Sidney F 1906 McKenzie Frank William 1907 Andrews Mrs Maude C Bryant Roy E Grice Mrs Otto (Florence

Knepper) 1908 Baddeley Dr Joseph Clarence Burg Mrs Walter A (Myrtle

Boyles) Simmons John Leslie Wilson Frank E Woods Tony W

(f~fi Clarence E Kelly Edna Rosene Laird Marple Everett Miller Claude A Smith Virgil Rodney Talbot Charles William 19 10 Bobeau Lucius McClellan Limon Gregorio ~II Couch Dr Otto Justin Maeda Teruzo Marston William Ray Rogers Jessie B Strickler Clair H 1912 Reeder George Kingsburg Sands Olea M Warwick Mrs Preston (Mary

Mann) 1913 Craner Albert E Creveling Alfred Benjamin Gaddis Dee Kirsch Karl

Knapp Harold Stanford Leavitt Clarence Ashton 1914 Almen Herman Victor Long Delbert C Meyer Henry William Newman Mrs Pauline Davis

(Pauline Davis) Rodgers Roliert Julius Spiers Archibald L C Wilson Philip Guy 191 5 Brown Stonewall Koppen Walter J McCormick Francis Howard Ney John Henry Platt Mrs Philip S Anette

Nicholl) Puckett Thomas C Stendquist Lender L 1916 Batts Bertha A McLaughlin George Swanson Swen Arthur Van Horn Bower 1917 Baker Adolph Irvin Greene Mrs W H C (Chrismiddot

tine M Wood)Humphrey Homer W Jeffrey Blanche C Luce Dr Harry C Miller Aubrey C Richardson Elizabeth Roach Mrs C M (Etl)a Batts)Russell Fred Lawrence Sato Jachi Sato Shinijiro Todd Paul Edward 19 1 8 Boyle Margaret Croonquistz Mrs Hugh A

(Helen T Holroyd)Ewing Clarence Charles Krafft E Gertrude Sisseau Mrs Fred G (Ora

Mabel Hickman)Smith Mrs Charlotte Robinson Traeger LeRoy Edwin

1919 Beck Esther LydiaJudges Bertha rhistlewaite Garnet VirgilWhitford Richard W

1920 Brett Matie DorothyBrooks Bert Edgar Mary Charlotte Henderson Winfield Lester Martin Harrison G McAninch Mrs Marion E

(Evelyn N Bradbury)Moore Gladys B Riviere Mrs Frank (Suzanne

M Moinard)Sera Sei Ropion Yvonne GeorgetteRitchie Helen Mae Seyer Mary Emily Shroll Walter Scott Shaw Robert L Stam Dr Edward Lockwood Stanton Will ClydeTainaka Ben Katsumi Valdivieso Fausto Wright Geraldine Ziegler Adolph

1921 Bartruff John A Black Mrs Van Nest (Mry

Todd Hodges) Collins Homer Arthur Fitch Mrs Clara

(Clara Hefty) Holmes Edna Alice Isamu Inouye Kruger John Henry Lyse Alvin Theodore Lytle Nelson Edwin Medby Arthur Moodhe David Herbert Muir Esther Davidson Myers Earl H Newland Mrs Ruth H

(Charles J) Rinehart John Marshall Street Mrs Julian

(Marguerite Skibeness) Taggert David Vander Heyden Joseph Wm M Watzek Peter Whitman Mrs Lorna Longwell 1922 Belknap Clifford Vernon Carr Mildred Irene Chamberlain Lowell Colby Phillip Henry Fox Heggmaier Caroline

Kee Mrs W H (Loree Whitney)

Patrick James G Pohl Clara Mildred Robin Lyla Josephine Watson James Winkler Stanley C 192 3 Bessette Josephine A Byrnes Eleanor Dunegan Irvin Ferguson Dewitt Talmage French Olive Bell Hansen Arthur Caleb Ideno Harry H Ishiyama Eiitsu Kidnay Katherine Page Carroll Gordon Taylor Harry Albert Zimmerman Ernest Theodore 1924 Barnes Ralph Howard Carlile Dallas Elijah Howard Henry R Johnson Merrit H Liu Min Chang Messenger William P Reese Chester G Simmons Mrs Estella J Snodgrass Milton Dean Steiner Marie Anne TeeGarden Mrs Lewis

(Alice Prindle) Westbrook John Lewis

192 5 Andes Mrs James O

(Esther Crawford) Campbell John Gordon Chandler Norman Edwards Ruth Harbeck Glenn C Hibbard Lorin G Hinton Paul Johnson Askel Herbert Kerr H Catherine Moore Margaret Newton George A Skinner Mrs Robert

(Eva Nordin) Smith Edward N White Mary Anieta Yasuda Masao

1926 Ballantyne Helen Man Coberly Dwight Crane Esther Lenore Davenport Earle Glenn Fisher William Alonzo Gillis Ewen Hess Mildred Eula Johnson Dr Walford Joseph Kreider Anna C Lapp Paul Alfred McIntire Aileen Olive Naggy Steve Norton Alice Augusta Owen Roy Martin Walker Clarence Wright Walton Edward Deane Mamie Engstrom Alva Carl Gudger Bessie Leona Johnson Frank J Largent Harry E Logan Mrs Hugh L

(Ethel Dora Keevy) McGucken Edward G Nakagawa Taniji Harry Nelson James Ade Okui James Jito Purnell Orien Virgil Sievers Mrs George

(Nelle V Jones) Smith David J Westbrook Mrs Jane Howe Worlds Clarence H

1928 Bennett Lawrence M Kowal Joe Lee Chite Meeker Herbert L Olson Esther Louise Taylor James Eldon Wilkie Mildred LaVelle

1929 Aquino Antonio Quesada Connolly Pat Wlliam Dial Mabel Jacobson Keener John Burton Jr Lester Viola G McFarland Mrs Marion Bush Lew Mi Ryan Mrs William C

(Maxine Damrell) Scranton Idol N Stevenson Robert S VanBossche Leonard

lowwow September 1141

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbull bullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1930 Allison James Frank Bailey Mrs Lyman N

(Helen Bolitho)Fang Tsung Han Donald Lewis Fox Hennessy Mary Lemmia Lavett AntollY Eustace Long F Cecil Olson Ruth Wilamena Platter John Laurence Ralph Harry Robert Roberts Mary Elizabeth Schirmer Evalyne Carolyn Steelman Julien Randolph Veldee Mrs R Marie

1931 Abey Lester E Chun William B Fuller David Thomas Fulmer Fred Roy McCall Harriett Irene Mahoney Alice Madelon Nelson M Maxine Schimelpfenig Clyde F Wilson James Walker

1932 Braganza Bonifacio B Carlson Oscar Theodore Gage Frank Henry Kaylor Raymond Doyle Meyers Merton Isabelle Micu Genenato Realin Miyota Nathaniel Susumu Noel James P Nyuha Bert K Padua Andrew M Suguitan Eustaquio Abella

1933 Corner Harold A Howland Alice Katherine Imes Eva Carol Layos Robert D Miller Monroe Eugene Ysui Yung Chi Young JeChun

1934 ~Balatero Jose Ancheta Galbraith Robert Donald ~ Herren Mary Peyton Hsu Pin Ling ~ Hytpwitz Lawrence David Leonard James Thomas ~ Little Myrtle Louise Ramos Inocencio Raguine ~ Scott Edward Rodney ~1935 ~ Dunbar Alver Herrold Dwight Elmer Jones Del E Lundberg Bert OmiddotShea Bill S Pontesso Leonard Arthur Stewart Daniel R Stewart Everett Earle Lyle E Tompkins

1936 Burns David Robert Carter Daniel Melvin Clnk Herbert Edward Elson Miss Vinnie Haynes Laird H Jewell Charles Arthur Rhine Duhois Clarence

1937 Holmes Richard Arthur Hougen Esther Larson Joseph B Snodgrass Jack H

1938 Akers Margaret M Dawley Muriel E Jones Juanita Sexton Ormsbee Richard Armstrong Smith Harold Gus Tamura Yoshio

1939 Black Richard Clark Burton Sydney Leonard Stubbs James W Nelson Howard Edmond Palafox Anastacio Laida Wooten Clyde Curtis

94 Cook Albert Thomas Jessup Ellen Clara

POWWOW September 1941

The LOST Are Found Alumni Office 211 Adminstration Building Pullman Washington

Gentlement Id like to report the following round-up of alumni on your Lost list

(signed) Name __

Address

Name Class

Address __ _ _ _

Lead to gt[ address __

Narne _ Class _

Address _ - - ____

Lead to get address ~~____

Name _ Class ___

Address ______

Lead to get address - - - -__

Narne _ Class _

Address

Lead to get address ~-

s~- _- Class __

Lead to get address ~- --- -

I Alumni Records There is increasing need for a mondeg complete record of Washington State Alumni

To this end your Alumni Office has searched all possible college records and has also received a very few personal data records from individuals This form will give your Alumni Office the essential informlltion which it needs from you Please accommoshydate us by filling it out and returning it with the halance of this page Thank you

Narne _ Class Degree _

Business firm - Position

Residence address shy

Date of birth Where - shy

Married on To yen bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Who attended (College) __ Class

Children (ages and names) ~

--------------_---------------------_-----------------------_------------------_------------------------_--___-----__shy

War record - - yen

Extra-curricular activity since leaving College (public offices clubs honors etc)

--- ------------------------------ ~__-- ----__-_ _____-__-__-_--_ ____----

_---_ _------__ ----------_--__----_______ ___--_--_-----_---____ shy

If you have not already submitted one we should like a recent photograph of yourshyself for our biographical file

9

The right minded alumnus can do much to keep the institution in a right In This Alumni Worldlight before the citizens of the state upon which it must depend for supshyport H e is in a sense its advertising agency If he gets Oltt of touch or out of sympathy with his Alma Mater she thereby suffers a great loss

-Thomas Arkle Clark Long-time Dean of Men Univ of Illinois

NEW LIFE MEMBERS JULY AND AUGUST

H H WAITE 26

BERT S NORLING 26

COL HAROLD G HOLT 15

l1R AND MRS ALLEN MANRING 32

1910 Walter E Rutherford is the owner of Rutherfords Pharmacy in Oakesdale Washington

1923 Mrs Alfred C Schy (Ora West) is living at Lamont Washington The Westss have three children Alfred Lee 6 Alan 4 and Marjorie Jane 2

1924 Mr and Mrs Dorcy D Nog1ey (Ida Hedborg) have one son born March 24 1939 They live at 684 Highland Avenue Glen Ellyn Illinois

1926 J F Gates is Property Officer and Comshypany Quarter Master at Camp Lee Vir-

How To Be A Member In Good Standing of the WSC Alumni

Association Its easy

You send cash money order or check amounting to $150 to the Alumni Office In return you receive a years subscription to the POWWOW official publication of the association printed ten times each year

Now that its on your mind why dont you - this minute - fill out the blank below and join an organization that is growing every day

Life Membership in the organization including years POWWOW $500

Name Class

Address City State

Please find $ for a years membership in the Association

Please bill me for the same amount on c and start sending POWWOW now

ginia He is an Entomologist

Mr and Mrs Harrie O Bohlke are livshying at 9547 - 24th Street N W Seattle Mr Bohlke is in the Industrial Departshyment of the Seattle Chamoer of Comshymerce From 1934 to 1941 he was the chief inspector for the Washington State Rignor Control Board and in 1939 he was in the Grand Lodge of BPOE

1927 Dr Harold Weatherman is a Pediatrician at the Rees-Stealy Clinic in San Diego California He lives at 3531 Arnold Ave

1928 James T Pringle is in the transportation Sales Department of Westinghouse Elecshytric and Manufacturing Company and lives at No 16 - 575 South Negley Aveshynue Pittsburgh Pennsylvania He and his wife (Margaret Palmer x 31) have a 20-month-old baby girl Helen

1930 Clifford E Long is in the United States

Employment Service as Manager and is ~ living at Hood River Oregon He is married and has two children In Janushyi ary 1940 he was given a medical disshy charge from the army with the rank of

Lieutenant At present he is a re-emshy_ ployment committeeman and works on the Selective Service System

Mrs Gara1d L Dixon (Helen Casey) lives at N 5111 Stone Street Bonners Ferry Idaho and has two children Carol Ann 10 and Jane Ellen 8 Mr and Mrs N Harold Squier are living at 850 Sunnyside Chicago Illinois with their nine-year-old daughter Nancy Maria Mr Squier is the training supershyvisor of the Commonwealth Edison and is acting as a teacher and worker in Civilian Defense

1931 Dr Esther M Roehr lives with her Docshytor husband at 903 E John Seattle They have two children Sandra Marie and Karen Eppa Stanley Ray is office nurse and anesthetist for Dr ] F Scott Surgeon in Yakima Washington She and her husband Dr Kenneth C Ray live at 213 N 24th Avenue Yakima Mr and Mrs Leonard W Swanson are living at Eatonville Washington The Swansons have two children Donald Alan 4 and Richard Lennart 1

1933 A Wilfred Welch is the Asst Engineer in the U S Engineer Dept at Eugene Oregon The Mr and Mrs (Verna C Robinson 32) live at 1380 Villord Street with Nancy Gayl their daughter

POWWOW September lUI 10

1934 Dr Marlowe Dittebrandt is a practicing physician in Portland Oregon She lives at the Heathman Hotel Her business adshydress is Room 212 Studio Building

1935 Alfred S Cleveland has been the Adshyministrative Assistant in the U S Deshypartment of Agriculture at Harvard Unishyversity Cambridge Mass In June howshyever he was called into active duty as a Lieutenant (JG) in the U S N R

1936 Rolf B Jorgensen is the Assistant Range Examiner of the U S Forest Service at Saint Anthony Idaho He married Doroshythy L Welch x31 in 1938 and they have one daughter almost two years old

Pauline Thomas is the P E and Health Teacher in the Seattle Public Schools and lives at 1019 Terry Avenue

1937 The chief wine chemist at the Gibson Wine Company in Fort Mitchell Kenshytucky is Wilbur Zeve1y whose address is Rivard Drive Dixie Highway

Robert E Click is Sanitarian in the Yakishyma City-County Health Dept He was treasurer of the Western Washington Dairy Technology Assn during 1941shy1942 406 South 27th Avenue Yakima Washington will reach him

~

Letters From Alums (Continued from Page Four)

Captain Claire Langley 36 sent in this letter to the alumni office recently from the Hawaiian Islands Captain Langleys address is 161st Infantry C O Service Co APO 25 coo P M San Francisco California

Pehea Oe

You see Im getting akamai Hawaiian isnt spoken much but the names are sure nani-if you say em right Its Ho no 100 100 not Hannah Loo lah That makes the kamaaina huhu and pegs you for a malihini And put a soft e on the end of Hawaii like this Hah weye e Thats no pilikia Now that youve had your language lesson Ill tell you someshything about the people and their islands The Hawaiian wahines are beautiful and their kane big and friendly And when they tell me Hele mai e ai they dont have to say that again I just answed Mahalo nui and move right in

Their best work though is Aloha

POWWOW SepCember lUI

Youll find it at the end of this letter But it means much more than just goodshybye Its Hello Love to You Good Morning How ya doing-any kind of a pleasant greeting And if a Hawaiian replies Aloha no believe it not he means Aloha yes Some newcomers get their Hawaiian all mixed up One pupule tourist wrote home that he was sitting on a lei with a lanai round his neck

Whats cookin Maybe a hukilau folshylowed by a big luau Hawaiians bake puaa with vegetables in an underground oven I ts some kaukau Your opu sure sticks out after all that fresh pineapple poi and fish-including one little feller they call humuhumunukunukuapuaa No wonder they say the language has vowel trouble at a lua a keikikane will walk right up an cocopalm in his bare feet and toss you down nuts to drink out of And then theyll shred the leaves and weave you a papale The hula dancers with pua in their hair sure go to town in fresh ti-Ieaf skirts and red muumuu They even put jitter-bugging in the shade And thats no hoopunipuni

But the deal here is surfing at Waikiki Riding a surfboard is a kick but takes practice Ill do mine in an outrigger canoe with a Hawaiian steering When he hollers Huki its lucky that old blue sea is wela for you certainly take a wetshyting as you toboggan down a huge wave Some thrill And no hele wawae back

For directions in Hawaii they tell you to go mauka or makai-thats to the mountains or toward the sea When you Go for broke its called welakahao If you cant understand all this letter look in the corner Thats a good start and when I learn some more Ill write you wikiwiki Good-bye now

Aloha nui

Signed Claire Langley

Helpful hints Pehea oe-Howre you Akamal-clever Nani-beautilul Huhu-angry Kamaalna-old timer lIaJlhini-newcomer Pilika-trouble Wahine-woman Kane-man Hele mal e ai-come In and eat Mahalo nul-thanks Pupule-looney Lei-garland Lanai-verandah Hukilau-net fishing Luau-feast Kelki-kane-boy Puaa-plg Kaukau-food Opu-stomach Papale-hat Pua-flower Muumuu-waist Hoopunlpun-lIe Huki-pull Wela-warm Hele wawae-walk Nul-big Wlklwlkl--quck

in other word Ity JOHN CLINTON

I As the His-CEE pano-Plymshy

outhandI bull grow old toshy~ gether my reshy

s12ect for the old bus inshycreases I think

when at last the war is over and new cars are once more availshyable Ill keep the H-P and have it stuffed

For example the other day one of the Union 011 engineers told me that If the speed of my enshygine were not reduced by the transmission and differential the H-P1ymouth would travel at something like 240 miles per houri Wowl

I never knew

before just tpMwhat the transshymission and _ differential ~ were for But it turns out that they tame the power generated by your engine and apply it in tableshyspoonfuls to the wheels And incidentally theyre two vital departments of your car

The transmission has something like 54 separate parts whizzing around Inside a sealed box It takes special lubricant that will withstand extreme high presshysure to lubricate that stuff 4nd If you let It go more than 5000 miles youre taking chances

Its too technical to explain in this space (even if I could do itl) but if you drive without proper lubricant in the T amp D a very unpleasant thing will hap pen The transmission will fOWl at you and the differentia will huml And once they start theyll never stop til you put in new expensive gears

So start now to have your Union Minute Mencheckyour transmission and differenshytial for you Theyll keep

a~curate records of when the service Is due and notify you to come In But-dont take chance All you get Is a noisy carl

1942 Washington State Football Schedule

Sept 26 Stanford T bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull Palo Alto Oct 3 OREGON Pullman

(Homecoming) Oct 10 MONTANA _ Pullman

(Dads Day) Oct 17 U S C Los Angeles Oct 24 O S C Portland Oct 31 Open Nov 7 Michigan State Spokane Nov 14 Idaho Tmiddotmiddotmiddot bullbullbullbull bull bullbullbullbull bull bullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull Moscow Nov 21 2nd Air Force Spokane Nov 28 Washington Seattle Dec 5 Texas A amp M San Antonio

FRESHMAN SCHEDULE Oct 31 Eastern Washington

College of Education~Pullman Nov 6 Idaho _ Moscow Nov 14 Washington Pullman

For tickets or information write or call OFFICE OF THE GRADUATE

MANAGER State College of Washington

Pullman Washington Telephone 1281

TICKET PRICES

HOMECOMING GAME

Goal to Goal $150

End Zone T 90

High School 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

DADS DAY

Goal to Goal $115

End Zone middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot T 75

High School _ 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

~iJkf

Page 6: ~T rllJJlJll1J P!lWW!lW

COUGARS IN THE SERVICE Three Washington State College alumshy

ni have been advanced to the rank of brigadier general it was announced by the war department

They are Lowell W Brooks 17 proshymoted from colonel infantry July 31 1942 Joseph L Philips 14 promoted from colonel cavalry July 28 1942 now assigned to army group Washington DC and S Lusker McCroskey 16 proshymoted from colonel coast artillery corps June 24 1942

Also listed by the department was a partial list containing names of seven WSC alumni who are now colonels and three who are lieutenant colonels in the United States service

Those listed as colonels were Arthur O Walsh 17 finance department (see write-up in June POWWOW) R H Back 18 infantry M V Fortier 16 ordinance department R M ODay 15 infantry now in the Pacific theater of war Harold G Holt 15 cavalry on duty with armored division (see write-up in June POWWOW) and William A Wapshypenstein 20 infantry who is on duty at a foreign station

The Lieutenant colonels were Hubert S Miller 21 corps of engineers Stanley M Nevin 25 veterinary corps now on duty at a foreign station and Cal Phillips 33 who is post adjutant at Randolph Field Texas and who formerly was WSC Alumni Secretary

Washington State College students who were graduated in class 42-F from Enid Army Flying School Oklahoma were Jack E Turner (1936-41) and Clark O Cordill (1935-40) Aviation Cadet Turshyner went to the Air Corps Advanced Flyshying School Lake Charles La and Aviashytion Cadet Cordill to the Air Corps Advanced Flying School Mission Texas Lt Bill Ambrosius 40 has been in the Phillipines and Java flying bombers He is now in Australia where he is a Finance Officer Censor Officer and Squadron Adjutant Ed Zydowsky freshman footshyball and baseball player in 1937 is in the army at Camp Grant Illinois playing on the baseball team In a game versus the Chanute Field baseball team the other day Ed hit one of the longest home runs ever seen in those parts

The promotion of Woodson Bennett 38 from the rank of First Lieutenant to that of Captain in the Medical Corps United States Army was announced by headquarters of the Medical Field Service School Carlisle Barracks Pa where Captain Bennett is an instructor in the Officer Candidate School Staff Sergeant

Howard R Melvin Jr 37 has been transferred to the Army Air Forces new Basic Flying School near Marana Arishyzona a desert villag~ some thirty miles from Tucson Prior to his induction into the Army Sgt Melvin was an accountant associated with the New York office of Price Waterhouse amp Co He is still enshygaged in accounting activities being now the assistant to the Finance Officer at themiddot Marana base Capt D R Morgan 30 is with General McArthur and his troops in Australia

Names that yesterday made headlines on local sports pages are today laboring in patriotic anonymity to impart toughshyening physical training to the Army flyshyers of tomorrow On the roster of physhysical middot training instructors in the West Coast Army Air Forces Training Center Santa Ana California are men who made sports history Three former WSCers arc John Klumb 39 Domonic George 35 and Joseph J Koegler 29

Second Lieutenant Louis 1 Miller 38 to 41 was commissioned as an officer in the U S Army Air Force at the Lubbock Army Flying School Lubbock Texas on July 3 1942 After a period of primary training at Pine Bluff Arkansas Lt Milshyler went to Perrin Field Texas for basic instruction At the Lubbock Army Flying School one of the newest and biggest in Americas victory program his training was in the twin-engine bomber type of aircraft Captain and Mrs Glen K Smith 36 are now at Fort Sam Houston Texas where Captain Smith is in the Medical Department of the Service School at the Station Hospital He writes that he had a letter from Ed Goldsworthy 36 inshyforming him that Ed and Oscar Schoff had been promoted to the grade of captain and are on duty in Puerto Rico

From the rank of Second Lieutenant to Captain in six months is the jump that Charles W Hoffman 41 took He reshyceived his wings and was commissioned as 2nd Lt on December 13 1941 and received his Captaincy in June 1942 Neil Seehom 40 to 42 has gone to New London Conn to attend the coast guard academy there He gained his place by passing competitive examinations He was secretary of the Intercollegiate Knights in his sophomore year at college

WSC WOMEN PLAY THEIR PART

Lois E Hamilton 31 has been ordershyed to San Francisco from where she will leave for forei gn duty as Head Dietitian in the U S Army Her orders were to

take enough clothing for three years Dorothy Bussard 34 is in Des Moines Iowa as part of Washingtons contingent of 46 to receive training in the Womens Army Auxiliary Corps

Judith McWhorter 39 Yakima and Janet Oswalt 42 Wilbur are new memshybers of the Women Appointed for Volunshyteer Emergency Service-WAVES-and will begin training at Smith college Northampton Mass

Graduating with the first WAAC class at Fort Des Moines was Dorothy McshyLellan Sunnyside 1939 business adminisshytration graduate

Helen E Dare 37 Second Vice Presishydent of the W S C Alumni Association wrote on August 18

I have accepted a position as personshynel technician with the Air Force Comshymand which will keep me traveling throughout the United States I am sorry to have to give up my new position in the Alumni Association but perhaps I can sell the Cougars There are only 60 of these trained technicians in the counshytry and a group of us (5) ar e the first girls to be accepted for the position so we are thrilled about it all and are deshytermined to do a good job

~

How About A Letter When Rodney Bittner 41 sent in his

$150 for another years subscription to the POWWOW he sent this note along

Just thought I would take time out between Jap bombs to write a few lines My folks forward the magazine to me and I do enjoy it (when possible to get our mail)

Would it be possible to put a bit in it asking any of myoid friends (if any) to drop a line What mail we sailors receive is greatly appreciated I am doing medical work on board ship and at times am very busy

On April 18 1942 I received commisshysion in Naval Reserve as an Ensign Since first of 1941 have been on active duty in Navy in Medical Corp and still am Also went through the December 7 1941 blitz at Pearl Harbor and other naval battles Hope to be in Naval Reshysearch Lab before the year is over Would appreciate hearing from anybodY who remembers me Address is USS MEDUSA c-o Fleet Postmaster San Francisco California or home address is 5049 South Thompson Tacoma Washshyington

POWWOW September 184 6

From Hotel Manageshyment To Quarter Masters Corps

By Shirley Ingram

Quarter Masters Corps-the subsist shyence division and commissary work of the army and navy finds priority value in college students trained in Hotel Adshymanagement says Lieut Col William L Morrison acting commandant Washshyington State College Military Science and Tactics

What mans army or navy would not find a growing need for men trained in the principfes of food selection and prepshyaration to manage commissary units The hotel field has long ranked near the top in big business but today the need for college trained men is causing unshyprecedented growth

With roots firmly fixed in chemical scishyence and nutritional knowledge and with practical work done in the large quantity kitchens of the State College food unitsshythe butcher shop and the bakeshop at the Commons-with all this background and advanced ROTC training these stushydents will find the challenging appetites of soldiers in the line of duty

During the school year they are given experience in the Hotel Washington in Pullman where they work in many capashycities-practicing the theory of classshyrooms-ranging from bus boys to assist shyant chefs to desk clerks

In addition to fifteen major home ecoshynomics courses Hotel Administration students take a number of courses in the school of business administration to beshycome acquainted with methods of acshycounting Courses in economics money and banking business finance advertisshying business law and labor problems give them an additional background for their work and for handling Uncle Sams finances Other courses demandshying their complete knowledge are psyshychology aFchitecture plumbing and enshygineering personnel management and equipment engineering

Twelve outstanding hotel men of the Northwest have been selected as an adshyvisory committee to aid and direct in the

planning of the Hotel Administration course Mr Walter CHst Culmstock Arms Mr James A McCluskey Davenshyport Hotel and Mr Sam Jordon Sposhykane Mr Harry Gowman Gowman Hotel Mr Frank Hull Olympia Hotel Mr Harold Dupar and Mr Frank W Thurston New Washington Hotel Mr A J Barash Secretary of the Washingshyton State Hotel Association Seattle Mr Thad Pierce Hotel Olympia Olympia Mr Earl McInnes Hotel MultnomahbullPOWWOW September lUI

Portland Mr Guy Toombes Hotel Utah Salt Lake City and Mr Carl Morck Morck Hotel Aberdeen compose the committee

Spokane serves as the laboratory for field trips that are taken to give the stushydents first hand knowledge of hotels Affiliated with the Spokane Chapter No 8 of Hotel 6reeters of America a WSC Greeters Club has been formed by Hotel students

In cooperation with the Spokane chaRshyter speakers are brought to the college at various times to discuss present probshylems in the hotel field A $100 scholarshyship is awarded each year to an outshystanding junior by the Spokane Hotel Greeters

The following partial roster of gradushyates of the Hotel Administration course of the State College shows their place in the United States Army and Navy-Capshytain Ward Walker Recreation Center Fort Lewis Ensign Robert H Hoffman U S Navy Air Force Washington DC First Lt Earl Redlin Infantry Camp Roberts Calif First Lt Harry Lane Army Quartermaster Corps Riverside Calif Second Lt Deane Cooper Officer Sale School Air Corps Flying School Victorville Calif Maurice Youngs Air Corps Flying School Stockton Calif

Indeed the 1942 hotel-military students are finding a new line of defense and are being geared in an all out effort to do their part in the subsistence dishyvision

~ HOMECOMING 1941

Board of Directors Meetinit

Alumni registering

Football Outlook (Continued Irom Page Three)

center Bill Ward left guard Nick Susoeff right end Jay Stoves left halfback Fred Small quarter and Bob Kennedy fullback all of whom did outstanding work last autumn George Dyson and Jim Wright a pair of 225-pounders who saw considerashyble action as sophomores last year are the probable starters at tackle

Renfro Will Return

Dick Renfro boxcar back who stayed out of college last year after two seasons of fine varsity service is due to be back and will be assigned to the blocking quarterback post Tom Brannigan stocky guard of the last two years was moved to quarter durshying spring practice and is expected to remain there

Frank Akins hard-running twoshyyear veteran halfback who was out of school last year will be back and will probably see duty at right half instead of left Earl Brenneis who broke in as a sophomore last fall will also be at right half Frank Londos husky fuIIshyback vet will bolster the backfield

Other lettermen on the list include Buster Hollingbery center Rod Giske and Gene Arger guards Mel Holben and Bill Gustafson tackles Max Dodge end and Jim Boyle quartershyback

Good Soph Prospects

Up from last years freshmen Jelly Anderson end Harry Planck guard and Jim Thompson halfback are topshynotch varsity prospects Marv Walker junior college transfer is a capable performer at halfback while Gene Evans and Benton Bangs both backs Were reserves last year

Other sophomore candidates include Vern Oliver center Tom Parry and John Godfrey guards Rufus Boldshyman and Les Metzger tackles Ralph Thompson George Kitna and Wallace Kramer ends and Ron Waggoner fullback

~ Plan now to see the Cougars in action

on Homecoming October 3

7

NEEDED Addresses For These Missing Washington Staters

A constant effort is being made to keep track of State College alumni but despite the effort it becomes a real task to know just where everyone is located During the past year many lost alumni have been founel but others have dropped out of sight and the list remains about the same

We need your help I Check over the alumni listed in both the Long Lost and Newly Lost lists and let Us know if you have any addresses or information which would lead to addresses of these people You will find a form for returning this information on the next page Thank you

Newly Lost 1910 Imus Clifford C 1914 Foster Dean Edward 1916 Hart Stadden S 1917 Griffith Mrs George

(Irene Palmer) 1918 Goertzen Mrs J A

(Alma Anderson) Homme Olav H 19 19 Rees Florence M Cutler Clarence W 1920 Brooks Mrs Juanita Ridenaur Horace Stam Dr -Edward L 192 3 Hollingsworth Walter M 192 4 Greenberg Nathan Lavin William A Williams Earl A bull Wooddy Mrs Edith L 192 5 Casey Sister Maureen Gage Kenneth McKillip William A Vincent Mrs Walter E

(Jennie Secrest) 1926 Wilfong Mrs J L

(Gladys Gue) 192 7 Mueller Vivian 1 Olson Emanuel Wilson Harry K 1928 Graham Lola Vivien Johnson Kenneth R Miller William A 1929 Yuni Richard V 1930 Osterman Mrs Leo

(Ana N egoescu) Pittman Chester Allen Swartz Helen Jane 1931 Rowland Katharine 1932 Guisleman George V Oien Gustav T middot Pohlman H Kingsley 1933 Henderson Earl L Van Doren Winifred M 1934 Jackson Virgil M Matthews John S Richey Loran P Wilson William F 1936 Agee James R Stewart Lorne J W Talcott Robert Van Patten

8

1937 Marlatt Leigh R 1938 McCabe Mrs Burton

(Helen Wersen) Siepman Richard D 1939 Tomita Junichi 1940 Ross Earle R 1941 Atkin Shirlen E Byers Doris V Fernandez Cipriana C Zier Ruth Lillian 1942 Ashton Willard H Hoop Jay Dee Jasper Dr Donald E Robinson LeRoy D

Long Lost 1899 Larkin Charles T 1900 Anderson John Frank Brown Peter

1903 Wallis William Alden 1~04 Carter Emily Barker Foster Sidney F 1906 McKenzie Frank William 1907 Andrews Mrs Maude C Bryant Roy E Grice Mrs Otto (Florence

Knepper) 1908 Baddeley Dr Joseph Clarence Burg Mrs Walter A (Myrtle

Boyles) Simmons John Leslie Wilson Frank E Woods Tony W

(f~fi Clarence E Kelly Edna Rosene Laird Marple Everett Miller Claude A Smith Virgil Rodney Talbot Charles William 19 10 Bobeau Lucius McClellan Limon Gregorio ~II Couch Dr Otto Justin Maeda Teruzo Marston William Ray Rogers Jessie B Strickler Clair H 1912 Reeder George Kingsburg Sands Olea M Warwick Mrs Preston (Mary

Mann) 1913 Craner Albert E Creveling Alfred Benjamin Gaddis Dee Kirsch Karl

Knapp Harold Stanford Leavitt Clarence Ashton 1914 Almen Herman Victor Long Delbert C Meyer Henry William Newman Mrs Pauline Davis

(Pauline Davis) Rodgers Roliert Julius Spiers Archibald L C Wilson Philip Guy 191 5 Brown Stonewall Koppen Walter J McCormick Francis Howard Ney John Henry Platt Mrs Philip S Anette

Nicholl) Puckett Thomas C Stendquist Lender L 1916 Batts Bertha A McLaughlin George Swanson Swen Arthur Van Horn Bower 1917 Baker Adolph Irvin Greene Mrs W H C (Chrismiddot

tine M Wood)Humphrey Homer W Jeffrey Blanche C Luce Dr Harry C Miller Aubrey C Richardson Elizabeth Roach Mrs C M (Etl)a Batts)Russell Fred Lawrence Sato Jachi Sato Shinijiro Todd Paul Edward 19 1 8 Boyle Margaret Croonquistz Mrs Hugh A

(Helen T Holroyd)Ewing Clarence Charles Krafft E Gertrude Sisseau Mrs Fred G (Ora

Mabel Hickman)Smith Mrs Charlotte Robinson Traeger LeRoy Edwin

1919 Beck Esther LydiaJudges Bertha rhistlewaite Garnet VirgilWhitford Richard W

1920 Brett Matie DorothyBrooks Bert Edgar Mary Charlotte Henderson Winfield Lester Martin Harrison G McAninch Mrs Marion E

(Evelyn N Bradbury)Moore Gladys B Riviere Mrs Frank (Suzanne

M Moinard)Sera Sei Ropion Yvonne GeorgetteRitchie Helen Mae Seyer Mary Emily Shroll Walter Scott Shaw Robert L Stam Dr Edward Lockwood Stanton Will ClydeTainaka Ben Katsumi Valdivieso Fausto Wright Geraldine Ziegler Adolph

1921 Bartruff John A Black Mrs Van Nest (Mry

Todd Hodges) Collins Homer Arthur Fitch Mrs Clara

(Clara Hefty) Holmes Edna Alice Isamu Inouye Kruger John Henry Lyse Alvin Theodore Lytle Nelson Edwin Medby Arthur Moodhe David Herbert Muir Esther Davidson Myers Earl H Newland Mrs Ruth H

(Charles J) Rinehart John Marshall Street Mrs Julian

(Marguerite Skibeness) Taggert David Vander Heyden Joseph Wm M Watzek Peter Whitman Mrs Lorna Longwell 1922 Belknap Clifford Vernon Carr Mildred Irene Chamberlain Lowell Colby Phillip Henry Fox Heggmaier Caroline

Kee Mrs W H (Loree Whitney)

Patrick James G Pohl Clara Mildred Robin Lyla Josephine Watson James Winkler Stanley C 192 3 Bessette Josephine A Byrnes Eleanor Dunegan Irvin Ferguson Dewitt Talmage French Olive Bell Hansen Arthur Caleb Ideno Harry H Ishiyama Eiitsu Kidnay Katherine Page Carroll Gordon Taylor Harry Albert Zimmerman Ernest Theodore 1924 Barnes Ralph Howard Carlile Dallas Elijah Howard Henry R Johnson Merrit H Liu Min Chang Messenger William P Reese Chester G Simmons Mrs Estella J Snodgrass Milton Dean Steiner Marie Anne TeeGarden Mrs Lewis

(Alice Prindle) Westbrook John Lewis

192 5 Andes Mrs James O

(Esther Crawford) Campbell John Gordon Chandler Norman Edwards Ruth Harbeck Glenn C Hibbard Lorin G Hinton Paul Johnson Askel Herbert Kerr H Catherine Moore Margaret Newton George A Skinner Mrs Robert

(Eva Nordin) Smith Edward N White Mary Anieta Yasuda Masao

1926 Ballantyne Helen Man Coberly Dwight Crane Esther Lenore Davenport Earle Glenn Fisher William Alonzo Gillis Ewen Hess Mildred Eula Johnson Dr Walford Joseph Kreider Anna C Lapp Paul Alfred McIntire Aileen Olive Naggy Steve Norton Alice Augusta Owen Roy Martin Walker Clarence Wright Walton Edward Deane Mamie Engstrom Alva Carl Gudger Bessie Leona Johnson Frank J Largent Harry E Logan Mrs Hugh L

(Ethel Dora Keevy) McGucken Edward G Nakagawa Taniji Harry Nelson James Ade Okui James Jito Purnell Orien Virgil Sievers Mrs George

(Nelle V Jones) Smith David J Westbrook Mrs Jane Howe Worlds Clarence H

1928 Bennett Lawrence M Kowal Joe Lee Chite Meeker Herbert L Olson Esther Louise Taylor James Eldon Wilkie Mildred LaVelle

1929 Aquino Antonio Quesada Connolly Pat Wlliam Dial Mabel Jacobson Keener John Burton Jr Lester Viola G McFarland Mrs Marion Bush Lew Mi Ryan Mrs William C

(Maxine Damrell) Scranton Idol N Stevenson Robert S VanBossche Leonard

lowwow September 1141

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbull bullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1930 Allison James Frank Bailey Mrs Lyman N

(Helen Bolitho)Fang Tsung Han Donald Lewis Fox Hennessy Mary Lemmia Lavett AntollY Eustace Long F Cecil Olson Ruth Wilamena Platter John Laurence Ralph Harry Robert Roberts Mary Elizabeth Schirmer Evalyne Carolyn Steelman Julien Randolph Veldee Mrs R Marie

1931 Abey Lester E Chun William B Fuller David Thomas Fulmer Fred Roy McCall Harriett Irene Mahoney Alice Madelon Nelson M Maxine Schimelpfenig Clyde F Wilson James Walker

1932 Braganza Bonifacio B Carlson Oscar Theodore Gage Frank Henry Kaylor Raymond Doyle Meyers Merton Isabelle Micu Genenato Realin Miyota Nathaniel Susumu Noel James P Nyuha Bert K Padua Andrew M Suguitan Eustaquio Abella

1933 Corner Harold A Howland Alice Katherine Imes Eva Carol Layos Robert D Miller Monroe Eugene Ysui Yung Chi Young JeChun

1934 ~Balatero Jose Ancheta Galbraith Robert Donald ~ Herren Mary Peyton Hsu Pin Ling ~ Hytpwitz Lawrence David Leonard James Thomas ~ Little Myrtle Louise Ramos Inocencio Raguine ~ Scott Edward Rodney ~1935 ~ Dunbar Alver Herrold Dwight Elmer Jones Del E Lundberg Bert OmiddotShea Bill S Pontesso Leonard Arthur Stewart Daniel R Stewart Everett Earle Lyle E Tompkins

1936 Burns David Robert Carter Daniel Melvin Clnk Herbert Edward Elson Miss Vinnie Haynes Laird H Jewell Charles Arthur Rhine Duhois Clarence

1937 Holmes Richard Arthur Hougen Esther Larson Joseph B Snodgrass Jack H

1938 Akers Margaret M Dawley Muriel E Jones Juanita Sexton Ormsbee Richard Armstrong Smith Harold Gus Tamura Yoshio

1939 Black Richard Clark Burton Sydney Leonard Stubbs James W Nelson Howard Edmond Palafox Anastacio Laida Wooten Clyde Curtis

94 Cook Albert Thomas Jessup Ellen Clara

POWWOW September 1941

The LOST Are Found Alumni Office 211 Adminstration Building Pullman Washington

Gentlement Id like to report the following round-up of alumni on your Lost list

(signed) Name __

Address

Name Class

Address __ _ _ _

Lead to gt[ address __

Narne _ Class _

Address _ - - ____

Lead to get address ~~____

Name _ Class ___

Address ______

Lead to get address - - - -__

Narne _ Class _

Address

Lead to get address ~-

s~- _- Class __

Lead to get address ~- --- -

I Alumni Records There is increasing need for a mondeg complete record of Washington State Alumni

To this end your Alumni Office has searched all possible college records and has also received a very few personal data records from individuals This form will give your Alumni Office the essential informlltion which it needs from you Please accommoshydate us by filling it out and returning it with the halance of this page Thank you

Narne _ Class Degree _

Business firm - Position

Residence address shy

Date of birth Where - shy

Married on To yen bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Who attended (College) __ Class

Children (ages and names) ~

--------------_---------------------_-----------------------_------------------_------------------------_--___-----__shy

War record - - yen

Extra-curricular activity since leaving College (public offices clubs honors etc)

--- ------------------------------ ~__-- ----__-_ _____-__-__-_--_ ____----

_---_ _------__ ----------_--__----_______ ___--_--_-----_---____ shy

If you have not already submitted one we should like a recent photograph of yourshyself for our biographical file

9

The right minded alumnus can do much to keep the institution in a right In This Alumni Worldlight before the citizens of the state upon which it must depend for supshyport H e is in a sense its advertising agency If he gets Oltt of touch or out of sympathy with his Alma Mater she thereby suffers a great loss

-Thomas Arkle Clark Long-time Dean of Men Univ of Illinois

NEW LIFE MEMBERS JULY AND AUGUST

H H WAITE 26

BERT S NORLING 26

COL HAROLD G HOLT 15

l1R AND MRS ALLEN MANRING 32

1910 Walter E Rutherford is the owner of Rutherfords Pharmacy in Oakesdale Washington

1923 Mrs Alfred C Schy (Ora West) is living at Lamont Washington The Westss have three children Alfred Lee 6 Alan 4 and Marjorie Jane 2

1924 Mr and Mrs Dorcy D Nog1ey (Ida Hedborg) have one son born March 24 1939 They live at 684 Highland Avenue Glen Ellyn Illinois

1926 J F Gates is Property Officer and Comshypany Quarter Master at Camp Lee Vir-

How To Be A Member In Good Standing of the WSC Alumni

Association Its easy

You send cash money order or check amounting to $150 to the Alumni Office In return you receive a years subscription to the POWWOW official publication of the association printed ten times each year

Now that its on your mind why dont you - this minute - fill out the blank below and join an organization that is growing every day

Life Membership in the organization including years POWWOW $500

Name Class

Address City State

Please find $ for a years membership in the Association

Please bill me for the same amount on c and start sending POWWOW now

ginia He is an Entomologist

Mr and Mrs Harrie O Bohlke are livshying at 9547 - 24th Street N W Seattle Mr Bohlke is in the Industrial Departshyment of the Seattle Chamoer of Comshymerce From 1934 to 1941 he was the chief inspector for the Washington State Rignor Control Board and in 1939 he was in the Grand Lodge of BPOE

1927 Dr Harold Weatherman is a Pediatrician at the Rees-Stealy Clinic in San Diego California He lives at 3531 Arnold Ave

1928 James T Pringle is in the transportation Sales Department of Westinghouse Elecshytric and Manufacturing Company and lives at No 16 - 575 South Negley Aveshynue Pittsburgh Pennsylvania He and his wife (Margaret Palmer x 31) have a 20-month-old baby girl Helen

1930 Clifford E Long is in the United States

Employment Service as Manager and is ~ living at Hood River Oregon He is married and has two children In Janushyi ary 1940 he was given a medical disshy charge from the army with the rank of

Lieutenant At present he is a re-emshy_ ployment committeeman and works on the Selective Service System

Mrs Gara1d L Dixon (Helen Casey) lives at N 5111 Stone Street Bonners Ferry Idaho and has two children Carol Ann 10 and Jane Ellen 8 Mr and Mrs N Harold Squier are living at 850 Sunnyside Chicago Illinois with their nine-year-old daughter Nancy Maria Mr Squier is the training supershyvisor of the Commonwealth Edison and is acting as a teacher and worker in Civilian Defense

1931 Dr Esther M Roehr lives with her Docshytor husband at 903 E John Seattle They have two children Sandra Marie and Karen Eppa Stanley Ray is office nurse and anesthetist for Dr ] F Scott Surgeon in Yakima Washington She and her husband Dr Kenneth C Ray live at 213 N 24th Avenue Yakima Mr and Mrs Leonard W Swanson are living at Eatonville Washington The Swansons have two children Donald Alan 4 and Richard Lennart 1

1933 A Wilfred Welch is the Asst Engineer in the U S Engineer Dept at Eugene Oregon The Mr and Mrs (Verna C Robinson 32) live at 1380 Villord Street with Nancy Gayl their daughter

POWWOW September lUI 10

1934 Dr Marlowe Dittebrandt is a practicing physician in Portland Oregon She lives at the Heathman Hotel Her business adshydress is Room 212 Studio Building

1935 Alfred S Cleveland has been the Adshyministrative Assistant in the U S Deshypartment of Agriculture at Harvard Unishyversity Cambridge Mass In June howshyever he was called into active duty as a Lieutenant (JG) in the U S N R

1936 Rolf B Jorgensen is the Assistant Range Examiner of the U S Forest Service at Saint Anthony Idaho He married Doroshythy L Welch x31 in 1938 and they have one daughter almost two years old

Pauline Thomas is the P E and Health Teacher in the Seattle Public Schools and lives at 1019 Terry Avenue

1937 The chief wine chemist at the Gibson Wine Company in Fort Mitchell Kenshytucky is Wilbur Zeve1y whose address is Rivard Drive Dixie Highway

Robert E Click is Sanitarian in the Yakishyma City-County Health Dept He was treasurer of the Western Washington Dairy Technology Assn during 1941shy1942 406 South 27th Avenue Yakima Washington will reach him

~

Letters From Alums (Continued from Page Four)

Captain Claire Langley 36 sent in this letter to the alumni office recently from the Hawaiian Islands Captain Langleys address is 161st Infantry C O Service Co APO 25 coo P M San Francisco California

Pehea Oe

You see Im getting akamai Hawaiian isnt spoken much but the names are sure nani-if you say em right Its Ho no 100 100 not Hannah Loo lah That makes the kamaaina huhu and pegs you for a malihini And put a soft e on the end of Hawaii like this Hah weye e Thats no pilikia Now that youve had your language lesson Ill tell you someshything about the people and their islands The Hawaiian wahines are beautiful and their kane big and friendly And when they tell me Hele mai e ai they dont have to say that again I just answed Mahalo nui and move right in

Their best work though is Aloha

POWWOW SepCember lUI

Youll find it at the end of this letter But it means much more than just goodshybye Its Hello Love to You Good Morning How ya doing-any kind of a pleasant greeting And if a Hawaiian replies Aloha no believe it not he means Aloha yes Some newcomers get their Hawaiian all mixed up One pupule tourist wrote home that he was sitting on a lei with a lanai round his neck

Whats cookin Maybe a hukilau folshylowed by a big luau Hawaiians bake puaa with vegetables in an underground oven I ts some kaukau Your opu sure sticks out after all that fresh pineapple poi and fish-including one little feller they call humuhumunukunukuapuaa No wonder they say the language has vowel trouble at a lua a keikikane will walk right up an cocopalm in his bare feet and toss you down nuts to drink out of And then theyll shred the leaves and weave you a papale The hula dancers with pua in their hair sure go to town in fresh ti-Ieaf skirts and red muumuu They even put jitter-bugging in the shade And thats no hoopunipuni

But the deal here is surfing at Waikiki Riding a surfboard is a kick but takes practice Ill do mine in an outrigger canoe with a Hawaiian steering When he hollers Huki its lucky that old blue sea is wela for you certainly take a wetshyting as you toboggan down a huge wave Some thrill And no hele wawae back

For directions in Hawaii they tell you to go mauka or makai-thats to the mountains or toward the sea When you Go for broke its called welakahao If you cant understand all this letter look in the corner Thats a good start and when I learn some more Ill write you wikiwiki Good-bye now

Aloha nui

Signed Claire Langley

Helpful hints Pehea oe-Howre you Akamal-clever Nani-beautilul Huhu-angry Kamaalna-old timer lIaJlhini-newcomer Pilika-trouble Wahine-woman Kane-man Hele mal e ai-come In and eat Mahalo nul-thanks Pupule-looney Lei-garland Lanai-verandah Hukilau-net fishing Luau-feast Kelki-kane-boy Puaa-plg Kaukau-food Opu-stomach Papale-hat Pua-flower Muumuu-waist Hoopunlpun-lIe Huki-pull Wela-warm Hele wawae-walk Nul-big Wlklwlkl--quck

in other word Ity JOHN CLINTON

I As the His-CEE pano-Plymshy

outhandI bull grow old toshy~ gether my reshy

s12ect for the old bus inshycreases I think

when at last the war is over and new cars are once more availshyable Ill keep the H-P and have it stuffed

For example the other day one of the Union 011 engineers told me that If the speed of my enshygine were not reduced by the transmission and differential the H-P1ymouth would travel at something like 240 miles per houri Wowl

I never knew

before just tpMwhat the transshymission and _ differential ~ were for But it turns out that they tame the power generated by your engine and apply it in tableshyspoonfuls to the wheels And incidentally theyre two vital departments of your car

The transmission has something like 54 separate parts whizzing around Inside a sealed box It takes special lubricant that will withstand extreme high presshysure to lubricate that stuff 4nd If you let It go more than 5000 miles youre taking chances

Its too technical to explain in this space (even if I could do itl) but if you drive without proper lubricant in the T amp D a very unpleasant thing will hap pen The transmission will fOWl at you and the differentia will huml And once they start theyll never stop til you put in new expensive gears

So start now to have your Union Minute Mencheckyour transmission and differenshytial for you Theyll keep

a~curate records of when the service Is due and notify you to come In But-dont take chance All you get Is a noisy carl

1942 Washington State Football Schedule

Sept 26 Stanford T bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull Palo Alto Oct 3 OREGON Pullman

(Homecoming) Oct 10 MONTANA _ Pullman

(Dads Day) Oct 17 U S C Los Angeles Oct 24 O S C Portland Oct 31 Open Nov 7 Michigan State Spokane Nov 14 Idaho Tmiddotmiddotmiddot bullbullbullbull bull bullbullbullbull bull bullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull Moscow Nov 21 2nd Air Force Spokane Nov 28 Washington Seattle Dec 5 Texas A amp M San Antonio

FRESHMAN SCHEDULE Oct 31 Eastern Washington

College of Education~Pullman Nov 6 Idaho _ Moscow Nov 14 Washington Pullman

For tickets or information write or call OFFICE OF THE GRADUATE

MANAGER State College of Washington

Pullman Washington Telephone 1281

TICKET PRICES

HOMECOMING GAME

Goal to Goal $150

End Zone T 90

High School 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

DADS DAY

Goal to Goal $115

End Zone middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot T 75

High School _ 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

~iJkf

Page 7: ~T rllJJlJll1J P!lWW!lW

From Hotel Manageshyment To Quarter Masters Corps

By Shirley Ingram

Quarter Masters Corps-the subsist shyence division and commissary work of the army and navy finds priority value in college students trained in Hotel Adshymanagement says Lieut Col William L Morrison acting commandant Washshyington State College Military Science and Tactics

What mans army or navy would not find a growing need for men trained in the principfes of food selection and prepshyaration to manage commissary units The hotel field has long ranked near the top in big business but today the need for college trained men is causing unshyprecedented growth

With roots firmly fixed in chemical scishyence and nutritional knowledge and with practical work done in the large quantity kitchens of the State College food unitsshythe butcher shop and the bakeshop at the Commons-with all this background and advanced ROTC training these stushydents will find the challenging appetites of soldiers in the line of duty

During the school year they are given experience in the Hotel Washington in Pullman where they work in many capashycities-practicing the theory of classshyrooms-ranging from bus boys to assist shyant chefs to desk clerks

In addition to fifteen major home ecoshynomics courses Hotel Administration students take a number of courses in the school of business administration to beshycome acquainted with methods of acshycounting Courses in economics money and banking business finance advertisshying business law and labor problems give them an additional background for their work and for handling Uncle Sams finances Other courses demandshying their complete knowledge are psyshychology aFchitecture plumbing and enshygineering personnel management and equipment engineering

Twelve outstanding hotel men of the Northwest have been selected as an adshyvisory committee to aid and direct in the

planning of the Hotel Administration course Mr Walter CHst Culmstock Arms Mr James A McCluskey Davenshyport Hotel and Mr Sam Jordon Sposhykane Mr Harry Gowman Gowman Hotel Mr Frank Hull Olympia Hotel Mr Harold Dupar and Mr Frank W Thurston New Washington Hotel Mr A J Barash Secretary of the Washingshyton State Hotel Association Seattle Mr Thad Pierce Hotel Olympia Olympia Mr Earl McInnes Hotel MultnomahbullPOWWOW September lUI

Portland Mr Guy Toombes Hotel Utah Salt Lake City and Mr Carl Morck Morck Hotel Aberdeen compose the committee

Spokane serves as the laboratory for field trips that are taken to give the stushydents first hand knowledge of hotels Affiliated with the Spokane Chapter No 8 of Hotel 6reeters of America a WSC Greeters Club has been formed by Hotel students

In cooperation with the Spokane chaRshyter speakers are brought to the college at various times to discuss present probshylems in the hotel field A $100 scholarshyship is awarded each year to an outshystanding junior by the Spokane Hotel Greeters

The following partial roster of gradushyates of the Hotel Administration course of the State College shows their place in the United States Army and Navy-Capshytain Ward Walker Recreation Center Fort Lewis Ensign Robert H Hoffman U S Navy Air Force Washington DC First Lt Earl Redlin Infantry Camp Roberts Calif First Lt Harry Lane Army Quartermaster Corps Riverside Calif Second Lt Deane Cooper Officer Sale School Air Corps Flying School Victorville Calif Maurice Youngs Air Corps Flying School Stockton Calif

Indeed the 1942 hotel-military students are finding a new line of defense and are being geared in an all out effort to do their part in the subsistence dishyvision

~ HOMECOMING 1941

Board of Directors Meetinit

Alumni registering

Football Outlook (Continued Irom Page Three)

center Bill Ward left guard Nick Susoeff right end Jay Stoves left halfback Fred Small quarter and Bob Kennedy fullback all of whom did outstanding work last autumn George Dyson and Jim Wright a pair of 225-pounders who saw considerashyble action as sophomores last year are the probable starters at tackle

Renfro Will Return

Dick Renfro boxcar back who stayed out of college last year after two seasons of fine varsity service is due to be back and will be assigned to the blocking quarterback post Tom Brannigan stocky guard of the last two years was moved to quarter durshying spring practice and is expected to remain there

Frank Akins hard-running twoshyyear veteran halfback who was out of school last year will be back and will probably see duty at right half instead of left Earl Brenneis who broke in as a sophomore last fall will also be at right half Frank Londos husky fuIIshyback vet will bolster the backfield

Other lettermen on the list include Buster Hollingbery center Rod Giske and Gene Arger guards Mel Holben and Bill Gustafson tackles Max Dodge end and Jim Boyle quartershyback

Good Soph Prospects

Up from last years freshmen Jelly Anderson end Harry Planck guard and Jim Thompson halfback are topshynotch varsity prospects Marv Walker junior college transfer is a capable performer at halfback while Gene Evans and Benton Bangs both backs Were reserves last year

Other sophomore candidates include Vern Oliver center Tom Parry and John Godfrey guards Rufus Boldshyman and Les Metzger tackles Ralph Thompson George Kitna and Wallace Kramer ends and Ron Waggoner fullback

~ Plan now to see the Cougars in action

on Homecoming October 3

7

NEEDED Addresses For These Missing Washington Staters

A constant effort is being made to keep track of State College alumni but despite the effort it becomes a real task to know just where everyone is located During the past year many lost alumni have been founel but others have dropped out of sight and the list remains about the same

We need your help I Check over the alumni listed in both the Long Lost and Newly Lost lists and let Us know if you have any addresses or information which would lead to addresses of these people You will find a form for returning this information on the next page Thank you

Newly Lost 1910 Imus Clifford C 1914 Foster Dean Edward 1916 Hart Stadden S 1917 Griffith Mrs George

(Irene Palmer) 1918 Goertzen Mrs J A

(Alma Anderson) Homme Olav H 19 19 Rees Florence M Cutler Clarence W 1920 Brooks Mrs Juanita Ridenaur Horace Stam Dr -Edward L 192 3 Hollingsworth Walter M 192 4 Greenberg Nathan Lavin William A Williams Earl A bull Wooddy Mrs Edith L 192 5 Casey Sister Maureen Gage Kenneth McKillip William A Vincent Mrs Walter E

(Jennie Secrest) 1926 Wilfong Mrs J L

(Gladys Gue) 192 7 Mueller Vivian 1 Olson Emanuel Wilson Harry K 1928 Graham Lola Vivien Johnson Kenneth R Miller William A 1929 Yuni Richard V 1930 Osterman Mrs Leo

(Ana N egoescu) Pittman Chester Allen Swartz Helen Jane 1931 Rowland Katharine 1932 Guisleman George V Oien Gustav T middot Pohlman H Kingsley 1933 Henderson Earl L Van Doren Winifred M 1934 Jackson Virgil M Matthews John S Richey Loran P Wilson William F 1936 Agee James R Stewart Lorne J W Talcott Robert Van Patten

8

1937 Marlatt Leigh R 1938 McCabe Mrs Burton

(Helen Wersen) Siepman Richard D 1939 Tomita Junichi 1940 Ross Earle R 1941 Atkin Shirlen E Byers Doris V Fernandez Cipriana C Zier Ruth Lillian 1942 Ashton Willard H Hoop Jay Dee Jasper Dr Donald E Robinson LeRoy D

Long Lost 1899 Larkin Charles T 1900 Anderson John Frank Brown Peter

1903 Wallis William Alden 1~04 Carter Emily Barker Foster Sidney F 1906 McKenzie Frank William 1907 Andrews Mrs Maude C Bryant Roy E Grice Mrs Otto (Florence

Knepper) 1908 Baddeley Dr Joseph Clarence Burg Mrs Walter A (Myrtle

Boyles) Simmons John Leslie Wilson Frank E Woods Tony W

(f~fi Clarence E Kelly Edna Rosene Laird Marple Everett Miller Claude A Smith Virgil Rodney Talbot Charles William 19 10 Bobeau Lucius McClellan Limon Gregorio ~II Couch Dr Otto Justin Maeda Teruzo Marston William Ray Rogers Jessie B Strickler Clair H 1912 Reeder George Kingsburg Sands Olea M Warwick Mrs Preston (Mary

Mann) 1913 Craner Albert E Creveling Alfred Benjamin Gaddis Dee Kirsch Karl

Knapp Harold Stanford Leavitt Clarence Ashton 1914 Almen Herman Victor Long Delbert C Meyer Henry William Newman Mrs Pauline Davis

(Pauline Davis) Rodgers Roliert Julius Spiers Archibald L C Wilson Philip Guy 191 5 Brown Stonewall Koppen Walter J McCormick Francis Howard Ney John Henry Platt Mrs Philip S Anette

Nicholl) Puckett Thomas C Stendquist Lender L 1916 Batts Bertha A McLaughlin George Swanson Swen Arthur Van Horn Bower 1917 Baker Adolph Irvin Greene Mrs W H C (Chrismiddot

tine M Wood)Humphrey Homer W Jeffrey Blanche C Luce Dr Harry C Miller Aubrey C Richardson Elizabeth Roach Mrs C M (Etl)a Batts)Russell Fred Lawrence Sato Jachi Sato Shinijiro Todd Paul Edward 19 1 8 Boyle Margaret Croonquistz Mrs Hugh A

(Helen T Holroyd)Ewing Clarence Charles Krafft E Gertrude Sisseau Mrs Fred G (Ora

Mabel Hickman)Smith Mrs Charlotte Robinson Traeger LeRoy Edwin

1919 Beck Esther LydiaJudges Bertha rhistlewaite Garnet VirgilWhitford Richard W

1920 Brett Matie DorothyBrooks Bert Edgar Mary Charlotte Henderson Winfield Lester Martin Harrison G McAninch Mrs Marion E

(Evelyn N Bradbury)Moore Gladys B Riviere Mrs Frank (Suzanne

M Moinard)Sera Sei Ropion Yvonne GeorgetteRitchie Helen Mae Seyer Mary Emily Shroll Walter Scott Shaw Robert L Stam Dr Edward Lockwood Stanton Will ClydeTainaka Ben Katsumi Valdivieso Fausto Wright Geraldine Ziegler Adolph

1921 Bartruff John A Black Mrs Van Nest (Mry

Todd Hodges) Collins Homer Arthur Fitch Mrs Clara

(Clara Hefty) Holmes Edna Alice Isamu Inouye Kruger John Henry Lyse Alvin Theodore Lytle Nelson Edwin Medby Arthur Moodhe David Herbert Muir Esther Davidson Myers Earl H Newland Mrs Ruth H

(Charles J) Rinehart John Marshall Street Mrs Julian

(Marguerite Skibeness) Taggert David Vander Heyden Joseph Wm M Watzek Peter Whitman Mrs Lorna Longwell 1922 Belknap Clifford Vernon Carr Mildred Irene Chamberlain Lowell Colby Phillip Henry Fox Heggmaier Caroline

Kee Mrs W H (Loree Whitney)

Patrick James G Pohl Clara Mildred Robin Lyla Josephine Watson James Winkler Stanley C 192 3 Bessette Josephine A Byrnes Eleanor Dunegan Irvin Ferguson Dewitt Talmage French Olive Bell Hansen Arthur Caleb Ideno Harry H Ishiyama Eiitsu Kidnay Katherine Page Carroll Gordon Taylor Harry Albert Zimmerman Ernest Theodore 1924 Barnes Ralph Howard Carlile Dallas Elijah Howard Henry R Johnson Merrit H Liu Min Chang Messenger William P Reese Chester G Simmons Mrs Estella J Snodgrass Milton Dean Steiner Marie Anne TeeGarden Mrs Lewis

(Alice Prindle) Westbrook John Lewis

192 5 Andes Mrs James O

(Esther Crawford) Campbell John Gordon Chandler Norman Edwards Ruth Harbeck Glenn C Hibbard Lorin G Hinton Paul Johnson Askel Herbert Kerr H Catherine Moore Margaret Newton George A Skinner Mrs Robert

(Eva Nordin) Smith Edward N White Mary Anieta Yasuda Masao

1926 Ballantyne Helen Man Coberly Dwight Crane Esther Lenore Davenport Earle Glenn Fisher William Alonzo Gillis Ewen Hess Mildred Eula Johnson Dr Walford Joseph Kreider Anna C Lapp Paul Alfred McIntire Aileen Olive Naggy Steve Norton Alice Augusta Owen Roy Martin Walker Clarence Wright Walton Edward Deane Mamie Engstrom Alva Carl Gudger Bessie Leona Johnson Frank J Largent Harry E Logan Mrs Hugh L

(Ethel Dora Keevy) McGucken Edward G Nakagawa Taniji Harry Nelson James Ade Okui James Jito Purnell Orien Virgil Sievers Mrs George

(Nelle V Jones) Smith David J Westbrook Mrs Jane Howe Worlds Clarence H

1928 Bennett Lawrence M Kowal Joe Lee Chite Meeker Herbert L Olson Esther Louise Taylor James Eldon Wilkie Mildred LaVelle

1929 Aquino Antonio Quesada Connolly Pat Wlliam Dial Mabel Jacobson Keener John Burton Jr Lester Viola G McFarland Mrs Marion Bush Lew Mi Ryan Mrs William C

(Maxine Damrell) Scranton Idol N Stevenson Robert S VanBossche Leonard

lowwow September 1141

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbull bullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1930 Allison James Frank Bailey Mrs Lyman N

(Helen Bolitho)Fang Tsung Han Donald Lewis Fox Hennessy Mary Lemmia Lavett AntollY Eustace Long F Cecil Olson Ruth Wilamena Platter John Laurence Ralph Harry Robert Roberts Mary Elizabeth Schirmer Evalyne Carolyn Steelman Julien Randolph Veldee Mrs R Marie

1931 Abey Lester E Chun William B Fuller David Thomas Fulmer Fred Roy McCall Harriett Irene Mahoney Alice Madelon Nelson M Maxine Schimelpfenig Clyde F Wilson James Walker

1932 Braganza Bonifacio B Carlson Oscar Theodore Gage Frank Henry Kaylor Raymond Doyle Meyers Merton Isabelle Micu Genenato Realin Miyota Nathaniel Susumu Noel James P Nyuha Bert K Padua Andrew M Suguitan Eustaquio Abella

1933 Corner Harold A Howland Alice Katherine Imes Eva Carol Layos Robert D Miller Monroe Eugene Ysui Yung Chi Young JeChun

1934 ~Balatero Jose Ancheta Galbraith Robert Donald ~ Herren Mary Peyton Hsu Pin Ling ~ Hytpwitz Lawrence David Leonard James Thomas ~ Little Myrtle Louise Ramos Inocencio Raguine ~ Scott Edward Rodney ~1935 ~ Dunbar Alver Herrold Dwight Elmer Jones Del E Lundberg Bert OmiddotShea Bill S Pontesso Leonard Arthur Stewart Daniel R Stewart Everett Earle Lyle E Tompkins

1936 Burns David Robert Carter Daniel Melvin Clnk Herbert Edward Elson Miss Vinnie Haynes Laird H Jewell Charles Arthur Rhine Duhois Clarence

1937 Holmes Richard Arthur Hougen Esther Larson Joseph B Snodgrass Jack H

1938 Akers Margaret M Dawley Muriel E Jones Juanita Sexton Ormsbee Richard Armstrong Smith Harold Gus Tamura Yoshio

1939 Black Richard Clark Burton Sydney Leonard Stubbs James W Nelson Howard Edmond Palafox Anastacio Laida Wooten Clyde Curtis

94 Cook Albert Thomas Jessup Ellen Clara

POWWOW September 1941

The LOST Are Found Alumni Office 211 Adminstration Building Pullman Washington

Gentlement Id like to report the following round-up of alumni on your Lost list

(signed) Name __

Address

Name Class

Address __ _ _ _

Lead to gt[ address __

Narne _ Class _

Address _ - - ____

Lead to get address ~~____

Name _ Class ___

Address ______

Lead to get address - - - -__

Narne _ Class _

Address

Lead to get address ~-

s~- _- Class __

Lead to get address ~- --- -

I Alumni Records There is increasing need for a mondeg complete record of Washington State Alumni

To this end your Alumni Office has searched all possible college records and has also received a very few personal data records from individuals This form will give your Alumni Office the essential informlltion which it needs from you Please accommoshydate us by filling it out and returning it with the halance of this page Thank you

Narne _ Class Degree _

Business firm - Position

Residence address shy

Date of birth Where - shy

Married on To yen bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Who attended (College) __ Class

Children (ages and names) ~

--------------_---------------------_-----------------------_------------------_------------------------_--___-----__shy

War record - - yen

Extra-curricular activity since leaving College (public offices clubs honors etc)

--- ------------------------------ ~__-- ----__-_ _____-__-__-_--_ ____----

_---_ _------__ ----------_--__----_______ ___--_--_-----_---____ shy

If you have not already submitted one we should like a recent photograph of yourshyself for our biographical file

9

The right minded alumnus can do much to keep the institution in a right In This Alumni Worldlight before the citizens of the state upon which it must depend for supshyport H e is in a sense its advertising agency If he gets Oltt of touch or out of sympathy with his Alma Mater she thereby suffers a great loss

-Thomas Arkle Clark Long-time Dean of Men Univ of Illinois

NEW LIFE MEMBERS JULY AND AUGUST

H H WAITE 26

BERT S NORLING 26

COL HAROLD G HOLT 15

l1R AND MRS ALLEN MANRING 32

1910 Walter E Rutherford is the owner of Rutherfords Pharmacy in Oakesdale Washington

1923 Mrs Alfred C Schy (Ora West) is living at Lamont Washington The Westss have three children Alfred Lee 6 Alan 4 and Marjorie Jane 2

1924 Mr and Mrs Dorcy D Nog1ey (Ida Hedborg) have one son born March 24 1939 They live at 684 Highland Avenue Glen Ellyn Illinois

1926 J F Gates is Property Officer and Comshypany Quarter Master at Camp Lee Vir-

How To Be A Member In Good Standing of the WSC Alumni

Association Its easy

You send cash money order or check amounting to $150 to the Alumni Office In return you receive a years subscription to the POWWOW official publication of the association printed ten times each year

Now that its on your mind why dont you - this minute - fill out the blank below and join an organization that is growing every day

Life Membership in the organization including years POWWOW $500

Name Class

Address City State

Please find $ for a years membership in the Association

Please bill me for the same amount on c and start sending POWWOW now

ginia He is an Entomologist

Mr and Mrs Harrie O Bohlke are livshying at 9547 - 24th Street N W Seattle Mr Bohlke is in the Industrial Departshyment of the Seattle Chamoer of Comshymerce From 1934 to 1941 he was the chief inspector for the Washington State Rignor Control Board and in 1939 he was in the Grand Lodge of BPOE

1927 Dr Harold Weatherman is a Pediatrician at the Rees-Stealy Clinic in San Diego California He lives at 3531 Arnold Ave

1928 James T Pringle is in the transportation Sales Department of Westinghouse Elecshytric and Manufacturing Company and lives at No 16 - 575 South Negley Aveshynue Pittsburgh Pennsylvania He and his wife (Margaret Palmer x 31) have a 20-month-old baby girl Helen

1930 Clifford E Long is in the United States

Employment Service as Manager and is ~ living at Hood River Oregon He is married and has two children In Janushyi ary 1940 he was given a medical disshy charge from the army with the rank of

Lieutenant At present he is a re-emshy_ ployment committeeman and works on the Selective Service System

Mrs Gara1d L Dixon (Helen Casey) lives at N 5111 Stone Street Bonners Ferry Idaho and has two children Carol Ann 10 and Jane Ellen 8 Mr and Mrs N Harold Squier are living at 850 Sunnyside Chicago Illinois with their nine-year-old daughter Nancy Maria Mr Squier is the training supershyvisor of the Commonwealth Edison and is acting as a teacher and worker in Civilian Defense

1931 Dr Esther M Roehr lives with her Docshytor husband at 903 E John Seattle They have two children Sandra Marie and Karen Eppa Stanley Ray is office nurse and anesthetist for Dr ] F Scott Surgeon in Yakima Washington She and her husband Dr Kenneth C Ray live at 213 N 24th Avenue Yakima Mr and Mrs Leonard W Swanson are living at Eatonville Washington The Swansons have two children Donald Alan 4 and Richard Lennart 1

1933 A Wilfred Welch is the Asst Engineer in the U S Engineer Dept at Eugene Oregon The Mr and Mrs (Verna C Robinson 32) live at 1380 Villord Street with Nancy Gayl their daughter

POWWOW September lUI 10

1934 Dr Marlowe Dittebrandt is a practicing physician in Portland Oregon She lives at the Heathman Hotel Her business adshydress is Room 212 Studio Building

1935 Alfred S Cleveland has been the Adshyministrative Assistant in the U S Deshypartment of Agriculture at Harvard Unishyversity Cambridge Mass In June howshyever he was called into active duty as a Lieutenant (JG) in the U S N R

1936 Rolf B Jorgensen is the Assistant Range Examiner of the U S Forest Service at Saint Anthony Idaho He married Doroshythy L Welch x31 in 1938 and they have one daughter almost two years old

Pauline Thomas is the P E and Health Teacher in the Seattle Public Schools and lives at 1019 Terry Avenue

1937 The chief wine chemist at the Gibson Wine Company in Fort Mitchell Kenshytucky is Wilbur Zeve1y whose address is Rivard Drive Dixie Highway

Robert E Click is Sanitarian in the Yakishyma City-County Health Dept He was treasurer of the Western Washington Dairy Technology Assn during 1941shy1942 406 South 27th Avenue Yakima Washington will reach him

~

Letters From Alums (Continued from Page Four)

Captain Claire Langley 36 sent in this letter to the alumni office recently from the Hawaiian Islands Captain Langleys address is 161st Infantry C O Service Co APO 25 coo P M San Francisco California

Pehea Oe

You see Im getting akamai Hawaiian isnt spoken much but the names are sure nani-if you say em right Its Ho no 100 100 not Hannah Loo lah That makes the kamaaina huhu and pegs you for a malihini And put a soft e on the end of Hawaii like this Hah weye e Thats no pilikia Now that youve had your language lesson Ill tell you someshything about the people and their islands The Hawaiian wahines are beautiful and their kane big and friendly And when they tell me Hele mai e ai they dont have to say that again I just answed Mahalo nui and move right in

Their best work though is Aloha

POWWOW SepCember lUI

Youll find it at the end of this letter But it means much more than just goodshybye Its Hello Love to You Good Morning How ya doing-any kind of a pleasant greeting And if a Hawaiian replies Aloha no believe it not he means Aloha yes Some newcomers get their Hawaiian all mixed up One pupule tourist wrote home that he was sitting on a lei with a lanai round his neck

Whats cookin Maybe a hukilau folshylowed by a big luau Hawaiians bake puaa with vegetables in an underground oven I ts some kaukau Your opu sure sticks out after all that fresh pineapple poi and fish-including one little feller they call humuhumunukunukuapuaa No wonder they say the language has vowel trouble at a lua a keikikane will walk right up an cocopalm in his bare feet and toss you down nuts to drink out of And then theyll shred the leaves and weave you a papale The hula dancers with pua in their hair sure go to town in fresh ti-Ieaf skirts and red muumuu They even put jitter-bugging in the shade And thats no hoopunipuni

But the deal here is surfing at Waikiki Riding a surfboard is a kick but takes practice Ill do mine in an outrigger canoe with a Hawaiian steering When he hollers Huki its lucky that old blue sea is wela for you certainly take a wetshyting as you toboggan down a huge wave Some thrill And no hele wawae back

For directions in Hawaii they tell you to go mauka or makai-thats to the mountains or toward the sea When you Go for broke its called welakahao If you cant understand all this letter look in the corner Thats a good start and when I learn some more Ill write you wikiwiki Good-bye now

Aloha nui

Signed Claire Langley

Helpful hints Pehea oe-Howre you Akamal-clever Nani-beautilul Huhu-angry Kamaalna-old timer lIaJlhini-newcomer Pilika-trouble Wahine-woman Kane-man Hele mal e ai-come In and eat Mahalo nul-thanks Pupule-looney Lei-garland Lanai-verandah Hukilau-net fishing Luau-feast Kelki-kane-boy Puaa-plg Kaukau-food Opu-stomach Papale-hat Pua-flower Muumuu-waist Hoopunlpun-lIe Huki-pull Wela-warm Hele wawae-walk Nul-big Wlklwlkl--quck

in other word Ity JOHN CLINTON

I As the His-CEE pano-Plymshy

outhandI bull grow old toshy~ gether my reshy

s12ect for the old bus inshycreases I think

when at last the war is over and new cars are once more availshyable Ill keep the H-P and have it stuffed

For example the other day one of the Union 011 engineers told me that If the speed of my enshygine were not reduced by the transmission and differential the H-P1ymouth would travel at something like 240 miles per houri Wowl

I never knew

before just tpMwhat the transshymission and _ differential ~ were for But it turns out that they tame the power generated by your engine and apply it in tableshyspoonfuls to the wheels And incidentally theyre two vital departments of your car

The transmission has something like 54 separate parts whizzing around Inside a sealed box It takes special lubricant that will withstand extreme high presshysure to lubricate that stuff 4nd If you let It go more than 5000 miles youre taking chances

Its too technical to explain in this space (even if I could do itl) but if you drive without proper lubricant in the T amp D a very unpleasant thing will hap pen The transmission will fOWl at you and the differentia will huml And once they start theyll never stop til you put in new expensive gears

So start now to have your Union Minute Mencheckyour transmission and differenshytial for you Theyll keep

a~curate records of when the service Is due and notify you to come In But-dont take chance All you get Is a noisy carl

1942 Washington State Football Schedule

Sept 26 Stanford T bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull Palo Alto Oct 3 OREGON Pullman

(Homecoming) Oct 10 MONTANA _ Pullman

(Dads Day) Oct 17 U S C Los Angeles Oct 24 O S C Portland Oct 31 Open Nov 7 Michigan State Spokane Nov 14 Idaho Tmiddotmiddotmiddot bullbullbullbull bull bullbullbullbull bull bullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull Moscow Nov 21 2nd Air Force Spokane Nov 28 Washington Seattle Dec 5 Texas A amp M San Antonio

FRESHMAN SCHEDULE Oct 31 Eastern Washington

College of Education~Pullman Nov 6 Idaho _ Moscow Nov 14 Washington Pullman

For tickets or information write or call OFFICE OF THE GRADUATE

MANAGER State College of Washington

Pullman Washington Telephone 1281

TICKET PRICES

HOMECOMING GAME

Goal to Goal $150

End Zone T 90

High School 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

DADS DAY

Goal to Goal $115

End Zone middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot T 75

High School _ 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

~iJkf

Page 8: ~T rllJJlJll1J P!lWW!lW

NEEDED Addresses For These Missing Washington Staters

A constant effort is being made to keep track of State College alumni but despite the effort it becomes a real task to know just where everyone is located During the past year many lost alumni have been founel but others have dropped out of sight and the list remains about the same

We need your help I Check over the alumni listed in both the Long Lost and Newly Lost lists and let Us know if you have any addresses or information which would lead to addresses of these people You will find a form for returning this information on the next page Thank you

Newly Lost 1910 Imus Clifford C 1914 Foster Dean Edward 1916 Hart Stadden S 1917 Griffith Mrs George

(Irene Palmer) 1918 Goertzen Mrs J A

(Alma Anderson) Homme Olav H 19 19 Rees Florence M Cutler Clarence W 1920 Brooks Mrs Juanita Ridenaur Horace Stam Dr -Edward L 192 3 Hollingsworth Walter M 192 4 Greenberg Nathan Lavin William A Williams Earl A bull Wooddy Mrs Edith L 192 5 Casey Sister Maureen Gage Kenneth McKillip William A Vincent Mrs Walter E

(Jennie Secrest) 1926 Wilfong Mrs J L

(Gladys Gue) 192 7 Mueller Vivian 1 Olson Emanuel Wilson Harry K 1928 Graham Lola Vivien Johnson Kenneth R Miller William A 1929 Yuni Richard V 1930 Osterman Mrs Leo

(Ana N egoescu) Pittman Chester Allen Swartz Helen Jane 1931 Rowland Katharine 1932 Guisleman George V Oien Gustav T middot Pohlman H Kingsley 1933 Henderson Earl L Van Doren Winifred M 1934 Jackson Virgil M Matthews John S Richey Loran P Wilson William F 1936 Agee James R Stewart Lorne J W Talcott Robert Van Patten

8

1937 Marlatt Leigh R 1938 McCabe Mrs Burton

(Helen Wersen) Siepman Richard D 1939 Tomita Junichi 1940 Ross Earle R 1941 Atkin Shirlen E Byers Doris V Fernandez Cipriana C Zier Ruth Lillian 1942 Ashton Willard H Hoop Jay Dee Jasper Dr Donald E Robinson LeRoy D

Long Lost 1899 Larkin Charles T 1900 Anderson John Frank Brown Peter

1903 Wallis William Alden 1~04 Carter Emily Barker Foster Sidney F 1906 McKenzie Frank William 1907 Andrews Mrs Maude C Bryant Roy E Grice Mrs Otto (Florence

Knepper) 1908 Baddeley Dr Joseph Clarence Burg Mrs Walter A (Myrtle

Boyles) Simmons John Leslie Wilson Frank E Woods Tony W

(f~fi Clarence E Kelly Edna Rosene Laird Marple Everett Miller Claude A Smith Virgil Rodney Talbot Charles William 19 10 Bobeau Lucius McClellan Limon Gregorio ~II Couch Dr Otto Justin Maeda Teruzo Marston William Ray Rogers Jessie B Strickler Clair H 1912 Reeder George Kingsburg Sands Olea M Warwick Mrs Preston (Mary

Mann) 1913 Craner Albert E Creveling Alfred Benjamin Gaddis Dee Kirsch Karl

Knapp Harold Stanford Leavitt Clarence Ashton 1914 Almen Herman Victor Long Delbert C Meyer Henry William Newman Mrs Pauline Davis

(Pauline Davis) Rodgers Roliert Julius Spiers Archibald L C Wilson Philip Guy 191 5 Brown Stonewall Koppen Walter J McCormick Francis Howard Ney John Henry Platt Mrs Philip S Anette

Nicholl) Puckett Thomas C Stendquist Lender L 1916 Batts Bertha A McLaughlin George Swanson Swen Arthur Van Horn Bower 1917 Baker Adolph Irvin Greene Mrs W H C (Chrismiddot

tine M Wood)Humphrey Homer W Jeffrey Blanche C Luce Dr Harry C Miller Aubrey C Richardson Elizabeth Roach Mrs C M (Etl)a Batts)Russell Fred Lawrence Sato Jachi Sato Shinijiro Todd Paul Edward 19 1 8 Boyle Margaret Croonquistz Mrs Hugh A

(Helen T Holroyd)Ewing Clarence Charles Krafft E Gertrude Sisseau Mrs Fred G (Ora

Mabel Hickman)Smith Mrs Charlotte Robinson Traeger LeRoy Edwin

1919 Beck Esther LydiaJudges Bertha rhistlewaite Garnet VirgilWhitford Richard W

1920 Brett Matie DorothyBrooks Bert Edgar Mary Charlotte Henderson Winfield Lester Martin Harrison G McAninch Mrs Marion E

(Evelyn N Bradbury)Moore Gladys B Riviere Mrs Frank (Suzanne

M Moinard)Sera Sei Ropion Yvonne GeorgetteRitchie Helen Mae Seyer Mary Emily Shroll Walter Scott Shaw Robert L Stam Dr Edward Lockwood Stanton Will ClydeTainaka Ben Katsumi Valdivieso Fausto Wright Geraldine Ziegler Adolph

1921 Bartruff John A Black Mrs Van Nest (Mry

Todd Hodges) Collins Homer Arthur Fitch Mrs Clara

(Clara Hefty) Holmes Edna Alice Isamu Inouye Kruger John Henry Lyse Alvin Theodore Lytle Nelson Edwin Medby Arthur Moodhe David Herbert Muir Esther Davidson Myers Earl H Newland Mrs Ruth H

(Charles J) Rinehart John Marshall Street Mrs Julian

(Marguerite Skibeness) Taggert David Vander Heyden Joseph Wm M Watzek Peter Whitman Mrs Lorna Longwell 1922 Belknap Clifford Vernon Carr Mildred Irene Chamberlain Lowell Colby Phillip Henry Fox Heggmaier Caroline

Kee Mrs W H (Loree Whitney)

Patrick James G Pohl Clara Mildred Robin Lyla Josephine Watson James Winkler Stanley C 192 3 Bessette Josephine A Byrnes Eleanor Dunegan Irvin Ferguson Dewitt Talmage French Olive Bell Hansen Arthur Caleb Ideno Harry H Ishiyama Eiitsu Kidnay Katherine Page Carroll Gordon Taylor Harry Albert Zimmerman Ernest Theodore 1924 Barnes Ralph Howard Carlile Dallas Elijah Howard Henry R Johnson Merrit H Liu Min Chang Messenger William P Reese Chester G Simmons Mrs Estella J Snodgrass Milton Dean Steiner Marie Anne TeeGarden Mrs Lewis

(Alice Prindle) Westbrook John Lewis

192 5 Andes Mrs James O

(Esther Crawford) Campbell John Gordon Chandler Norman Edwards Ruth Harbeck Glenn C Hibbard Lorin G Hinton Paul Johnson Askel Herbert Kerr H Catherine Moore Margaret Newton George A Skinner Mrs Robert

(Eva Nordin) Smith Edward N White Mary Anieta Yasuda Masao

1926 Ballantyne Helen Man Coberly Dwight Crane Esther Lenore Davenport Earle Glenn Fisher William Alonzo Gillis Ewen Hess Mildred Eula Johnson Dr Walford Joseph Kreider Anna C Lapp Paul Alfred McIntire Aileen Olive Naggy Steve Norton Alice Augusta Owen Roy Martin Walker Clarence Wright Walton Edward Deane Mamie Engstrom Alva Carl Gudger Bessie Leona Johnson Frank J Largent Harry E Logan Mrs Hugh L

(Ethel Dora Keevy) McGucken Edward G Nakagawa Taniji Harry Nelson James Ade Okui James Jito Purnell Orien Virgil Sievers Mrs George

(Nelle V Jones) Smith David J Westbrook Mrs Jane Howe Worlds Clarence H

1928 Bennett Lawrence M Kowal Joe Lee Chite Meeker Herbert L Olson Esther Louise Taylor James Eldon Wilkie Mildred LaVelle

1929 Aquino Antonio Quesada Connolly Pat Wlliam Dial Mabel Jacobson Keener John Burton Jr Lester Viola G McFarland Mrs Marion Bush Lew Mi Ryan Mrs William C

(Maxine Damrell) Scranton Idol N Stevenson Robert S VanBossche Leonard

lowwow September 1141

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbull bullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1930 Allison James Frank Bailey Mrs Lyman N

(Helen Bolitho)Fang Tsung Han Donald Lewis Fox Hennessy Mary Lemmia Lavett AntollY Eustace Long F Cecil Olson Ruth Wilamena Platter John Laurence Ralph Harry Robert Roberts Mary Elizabeth Schirmer Evalyne Carolyn Steelman Julien Randolph Veldee Mrs R Marie

1931 Abey Lester E Chun William B Fuller David Thomas Fulmer Fred Roy McCall Harriett Irene Mahoney Alice Madelon Nelson M Maxine Schimelpfenig Clyde F Wilson James Walker

1932 Braganza Bonifacio B Carlson Oscar Theodore Gage Frank Henry Kaylor Raymond Doyle Meyers Merton Isabelle Micu Genenato Realin Miyota Nathaniel Susumu Noel James P Nyuha Bert K Padua Andrew M Suguitan Eustaquio Abella

1933 Corner Harold A Howland Alice Katherine Imes Eva Carol Layos Robert D Miller Monroe Eugene Ysui Yung Chi Young JeChun

1934 ~Balatero Jose Ancheta Galbraith Robert Donald ~ Herren Mary Peyton Hsu Pin Ling ~ Hytpwitz Lawrence David Leonard James Thomas ~ Little Myrtle Louise Ramos Inocencio Raguine ~ Scott Edward Rodney ~1935 ~ Dunbar Alver Herrold Dwight Elmer Jones Del E Lundberg Bert OmiddotShea Bill S Pontesso Leonard Arthur Stewart Daniel R Stewart Everett Earle Lyle E Tompkins

1936 Burns David Robert Carter Daniel Melvin Clnk Herbert Edward Elson Miss Vinnie Haynes Laird H Jewell Charles Arthur Rhine Duhois Clarence

1937 Holmes Richard Arthur Hougen Esther Larson Joseph B Snodgrass Jack H

1938 Akers Margaret M Dawley Muriel E Jones Juanita Sexton Ormsbee Richard Armstrong Smith Harold Gus Tamura Yoshio

1939 Black Richard Clark Burton Sydney Leonard Stubbs James W Nelson Howard Edmond Palafox Anastacio Laida Wooten Clyde Curtis

94 Cook Albert Thomas Jessup Ellen Clara

POWWOW September 1941

The LOST Are Found Alumni Office 211 Adminstration Building Pullman Washington

Gentlement Id like to report the following round-up of alumni on your Lost list

(signed) Name __

Address

Name Class

Address __ _ _ _

Lead to gt[ address __

Narne _ Class _

Address _ - - ____

Lead to get address ~~____

Name _ Class ___

Address ______

Lead to get address - - - -__

Narne _ Class _

Address

Lead to get address ~-

s~- _- Class __

Lead to get address ~- --- -

I Alumni Records There is increasing need for a mondeg complete record of Washington State Alumni

To this end your Alumni Office has searched all possible college records and has also received a very few personal data records from individuals This form will give your Alumni Office the essential informlltion which it needs from you Please accommoshydate us by filling it out and returning it with the halance of this page Thank you

Narne _ Class Degree _

Business firm - Position

Residence address shy

Date of birth Where - shy

Married on To yen bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Who attended (College) __ Class

Children (ages and names) ~

--------------_---------------------_-----------------------_------------------_------------------------_--___-----__shy

War record - - yen

Extra-curricular activity since leaving College (public offices clubs honors etc)

--- ------------------------------ ~__-- ----__-_ _____-__-__-_--_ ____----

_---_ _------__ ----------_--__----_______ ___--_--_-----_---____ shy

If you have not already submitted one we should like a recent photograph of yourshyself for our biographical file

9

The right minded alumnus can do much to keep the institution in a right In This Alumni Worldlight before the citizens of the state upon which it must depend for supshyport H e is in a sense its advertising agency If he gets Oltt of touch or out of sympathy with his Alma Mater she thereby suffers a great loss

-Thomas Arkle Clark Long-time Dean of Men Univ of Illinois

NEW LIFE MEMBERS JULY AND AUGUST

H H WAITE 26

BERT S NORLING 26

COL HAROLD G HOLT 15

l1R AND MRS ALLEN MANRING 32

1910 Walter E Rutherford is the owner of Rutherfords Pharmacy in Oakesdale Washington

1923 Mrs Alfred C Schy (Ora West) is living at Lamont Washington The Westss have three children Alfred Lee 6 Alan 4 and Marjorie Jane 2

1924 Mr and Mrs Dorcy D Nog1ey (Ida Hedborg) have one son born March 24 1939 They live at 684 Highland Avenue Glen Ellyn Illinois

1926 J F Gates is Property Officer and Comshypany Quarter Master at Camp Lee Vir-

How To Be A Member In Good Standing of the WSC Alumni

Association Its easy

You send cash money order or check amounting to $150 to the Alumni Office In return you receive a years subscription to the POWWOW official publication of the association printed ten times each year

Now that its on your mind why dont you - this minute - fill out the blank below and join an organization that is growing every day

Life Membership in the organization including years POWWOW $500

Name Class

Address City State

Please find $ for a years membership in the Association

Please bill me for the same amount on c and start sending POWWOW now

ginia He is an Entomologist

Mr and Mrs Harrie O Bohlke are livshying at 9547 - 24th Street N W Seattle Mr Bohlke is in the Industrial Departshyment of the Seattle Chamoer of Comshymerce From 1934 to 1941 he was the chief inspector for the Washington State Rignor Control Board and in 1939 he was in the Grand Lodge of BPOE

1927 Dr Harold Weatherman is a Pediatrician at the Rees-Stealy Clinic in San Diego California He lives at 3531 Arnold Ave

1928 James T Pringle is in the transportation Sales Department of Westinghouse Elecshytric and Manufacturing Company and lives at No 16 - 575 South Negley Aveshynue Pittsburgh Pennsylvania He and his wife (Margaret Palmer x 31) have a 20-month-old baby girl Helen

1930 Clifford E Long is in the United States

Employment Service as Manager and is ~ living at Hood River Oregon He is married and has two children In Janushyi ary 1940 he was given a medical disshy charge from the army with the rank of

Lieutenant At present he is a re-emshy_ ployment committeeman and works on the Selective Service System

Mrs Gara1d L Dixon (Helen Casey) lives at N 5111 Stone Street Bonners Ferry Idaho and has two children Carol Ann 10 and Jane Ellen 8 Mr and Mrs N Harold Squier are living at 850 Sunnyside Chicago Illinois with their nine-year-old daughter Nancy Maria Mr Squier is the training supershyvisor of the Commonwealth Edison and is acting as a teacher and worker in Civilian Defense

1931 Dr Esther M Roehr lives with her Docshytor husband at 903 E John Seattle They have two children Sandra Marie and Karen Eppa Stanley Ray is office nurse and anesthetist for Dr ] F Scott Surgeon in Yakima Washington She and her husband Dr Kenneth C Ray live at 213 N 24th Avenue Yakima Mr and Mrs Leonard W Swanson are living at Eatonville Washington The Swansons have two children Donald Alan 4 and Richard Lennart 1

1933 A Wilfred Welch is the Asst Engineer in the U S Engineer Dept at Eugene Oregon The Mr and Mrs (Verna C Robinson 32) live at 1380 Villord Street with Nancy Gayl their daughter

POWWOW September lUI 10

1934 Dr Marlowe Dittebrandt is a practicing physician in Portland Oregon She lives at the Heathman Hotel Her business adshydress is Room 212 Studio Building

1935 Alfred S Cleveland has been the Adshyministrative Assistant in the U S Deshypartment of Agriculture at Harvard Unishyversity Cambridge Mass In June howshyever he was called into active duty as a Lieutenant (JG) in the U S N R

1936 Rolf B Jorgensen is the Assistant Range Examiner of the U S Forest Service at Saint Anthony Idaho He married Doroshythy L Welch x31 in 1938 and they have one daughter almost two years old

Pauline Thomas is the P E and Health Teacher in the Seattle Public Schools and lives at 1019 Terry Avenue

1937 The chief wine chemist at the Gibson Wine Company in Fort Mitchell Kenshytucky is Wilbur Zeve1y whose address is Rivard Drive Dixie Highway

Robert E Click is Sanitarian in the Yakishyma City-County Health Dept He was treasurer of the Western Washington Dairy Technology Assn during 1941shy1942 406 South 27th Avenue Yakima Washington will reach him

~

Letters From Alums (Continued from Page Four)

Captain Claire Langley 36 sent in this letter to the alumni office recently from the Hawaiian Islands Captain Langleys address is 161st Infantry C O Service Co APO 25 coo P M San Francisco California

Pehea Oe

You see Im getting akamai Hawaiian isnt spoken much but the names are sure nani-if you say em right Its Ho no 100 100 not Hannah Loo lah That makes the kamaaina huhu and pegs you for a malihini And put a soft e on the end of Hawaii like this Hah weye e Thats no pilikia Now that youve had your language lesson Ill tell you someshything about the people and their islands The Hawaiian wahines are beautiful and their kane big and friendly And when they tell me Hele mai e ai they dont have to say that again I just answed Mahalo nui and move right in

Their best work though is Aloha

POWWOW SepCember lUI

Youll find it at the end of this letter But it means much more than just goodshybye Its Hello Love to You Good Morning How ya doing-any kind of a pleasant greeting And if a Hawaiian replies Aloha no believe it not he means Aloha yes Some newcomers get their Hawaiian all mixed up One pupule tourist wrote home that he was sitting on a lei with a lanai round his neck

Whats cookin Maybe a hukilau folshylowed by a big luau Hawaiians bake puaa with vegetables in an underground oven I ts some kaukau Your opu sure sticks out after all that fresh pineapple poi and fish-including one little feller they call humuhumunukunukuapuaa No wonder they say the language has vowel trouble at a lua a keikikane will walk right up an cocopalm in his bare feet and toss you down nuts to drink out of And then theyll shred the leaves and weave you a papale The hula dancers with pua in their hair sure go to town in fresh ti-Ieaf skirts and red muumuu They even put jitter-bugging in the shade And thats no hoopunipuni

But the deal here is surfing at Waikiki Riding a surfboard is a kick but takes practice Ill do mine in an outrigger canoe with a Hawaiian steering When he hollers Huki its lucky that old blue sea is wela for you certainly take a wetshyting as you toboggan down a huge wave Some thrill And no hele wawae back

For directions in Hawaii they tell you to go mauka or makai-thats to the mountains or toward the sea When you Go for broke its called welakahao If you cant understand all this letter look in the corner Thats a good start and when I learn some more Ill write you wikiwiki Good-bye now

Aloha nui

Signed Claire Langley

Helpful hints Pehea oe-Howre you Akamal-clever Nani-beautilul Huhu-angry Kamaalna-old timer lIaJlhini-newcomer Pilika-trouble Wahine-woman Kane-man Hele mal e ai-come In and eat Mahalo nul-thanks Pupule-looney Lei-garland Lanai-verandah Hukilau-net fishing Luau-feast Kelki-kane-boy Puaa-plg Kaukau-food Opu-stomach Papale-hat Pua-flower Muumuu-waist Hoopunlpun-lIe Huki-pull Wela-warm Hele wawae-walk Nul-big Wlklwlkl--quck

in other word Ity JOHN CLINTON

I As the His-CEE pano-Plymshy

outhandI bull grow old toshy~ gether my reshy

s12ect for the old bus inshycreases I think

when at last the war is over and new cars are once more availshyable Ill keep the H-P and have it stuffed

For example the other day one of the Union 011 engineers told me that If the speed of my enshygine were not reduced by the transmission and differential the H-P1ymouth would travel at something like 240 miles per houri Wowl

I never knew

before just tpMwhat the transshymission and _ differential ~ were for But it turns out that they tame the power generated by your engine and apply it in tableshyspoonfuls to the wheels And incidentally theyre two vital departments of your car

The transmission has something like 54 separate parts whizzing around Inside a sealed box It takes special lubricant that will withstand extreme high presshysure to lubricate that stuff 4nd If you let It go more than 5000 miles youre taking chances

Its too technical to explain in this space (even if I could do itl) but if you drive without proper lubricant in the T amp D a very unpleasant thing will hap pen The transmission will fOWl at you and the differentia will huml And once they start theyll never stop til you put in new expensive gears

So start now to have your Union Minute Mencheckyour transmission and differenshytial for you Theyll keep

a~curate records of when the service Is due and notify you to come In But-dont take chance All you get Is a noisy carl

1942 Washington State Football Schedule

Sept 26 Stanford T bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull Palo Alto Oct 3 OREGON Pullman

(Homecoming) Oct 10 MONTANA _ Pullman

(Dads Day) Oct 17 U S C Los Angeles Oct 24 O S C Portland Oct 31 Open Nov 7 Michigan State Spokane Nov 14 Idaho Tmiddotmiddotmiddot bullbullbullbull bull bullbullbullbull bull bullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull Moscow Nov 21 2nd Air Force Spokane Nov 28 Washington Seattle Dec 5 Texas A amp M San Antonio

FRESHMAN SCHEDULE Oct 31 Eastern Washington

College of Education~Pullman Nov 6 Idaho _ Moscow Nov 14 Washington Pullman

For tickets or information write or call OFFICE OF THE GRADUATE

MANAGER State College of Washington

Pullman Washington Telephone 1281

TICKET PRICES

HOMECOMING GAME

Goal to Goal $150

End Zone T 90

High School 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

DADS DAY

Goal to Goal $115

End Zone middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot T 75

High School _ 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

~iJkf

Page 9: ~T rllJJlJll1J P!lWW!lW

bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bullbull bullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull bull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

1930 Allison James Frank Bailey Mrs Lyman N

(Helen Bolitho)Fang Tsung Han Donald Lewis Fox Hennessy Mary Lemmia Lavett AntollY Eustace Long F Cecil Olson Ruth Wilamena Platter John Laurence Ralph Harry Robert Roberts Mary Elizabeth Schirmer Evalyne Carolyn Steelman Julien Randolph Veldee Mrs R Marie

1931 Abey Lester E Chun William B Fuller David Thomas Fulmer Fred Roy McCall Harriett Irene Mahoney Alice Madelon Nelson M Maxine Schimelpfenig Clyde F Wilson James Walker

1932 Braganza Bonifacio B Carlson Oscar Theodore Gage Frank Henry Kaylor Raymond Doyle Meyers Merton Isabelle Micu Genenato Realin Miyota Nathaniel Susumu Noel James P Nyuha Bert K Padua Andrew M Suguitan Eustaquio Abella

1933 Corner Harold A Howland Alice Katherine Imes Eva Carol Layos Robert D Miller Monroe Eugene Ysui Yung Chi Young JeChun

1934 ~Balatero Jose Ancheta Galbraith Robert Donald ~ Herren Mary Peyton Hsu Pin Ling ~ Hytpwitz Lawrence David Leonard James Thomas ~ Little Myrtle Louise Ramos Inocencio Raguine ~ Scott Edward Rodney ~1935 ~ Dunbar Alver Herrold Dwight Elmer Jones Del E Lundberg Bert OmiddotShea Bill S Pontesso Leonard Arthur Stewart Daniel R Stewart Everett Earle Lyle E Tompkins

1936 Burns David Robert Carter Daniel Melvin Clnk Herbert Edward Elson Miss Vinnie Haynes Laird H Jewell Charles Arthur Rhine Duhois Clarence

1937 Holmes Richard Arthur Hougen Esther Larson Joseph B Snodgrass Jack H

1938 Akers Margaret M Dawley Muriel E Jones Juanita Sexton Ormsbee Richard Armstrong Smith Harold Gus Tamura Yoshio

1939 Black Richard Clark Burton Sydney Leonard Stubbs James W Nelson Howard Edmond Palafox Anastacio Laida Wooten Clyde Curtis

94 Cook Albert Thomas Jessup Ellen Clara

POWWOW September 1941

The LOST Are Found Alumni Office 211 Adminstration Building Pullman Washington

Gentlement Id like to report the following round-up of alumni on your Lost list

(signed) Name __

Address

Name Class

Address __ _ _ _

Lead to gt[ address __

Narne _ Class _

Address _ - - ____

Lead to get address ~~____

Name _ Class ___

Address ______

Lead to get address - - - -__

Narne _ Class _

Address

Lead to get address ~-

s~- _- Class __

Lead to get address ~- --- -

I Alumni Records There is increasing need for a mondeg complete record of Washington State Alumni

To this end your Alumni Office has searched all possible college records and has also received a very few personal data records from individuals This form will give your Alumni Office the essential informlltion which it needs from you Please accommoshydate us by filling it out and returning it with the halance of this page Thank you

Narne _ Class Degree _

Business firm - Position

Residence address shy

Date of birth Where - shy

Married on To yen bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull

Who attended (College) __ Class

Children (ages and names) ~

--------------_---------------------_-----------------------_------------------_------------------------_--___-----__shy

War record - - yen

Extra-curricular activity since leaving College (public offices clubs honors etc)

--- ------------------------------ ~__-- ----__-_ _____-__-__-_--_ ____----

_---_ _------__ ----------_--__----_______ ___--_--_-----_---____ shy

If you have not already submitted one we should like a recent photograph of yourshyself for our biographical file

9

The right minded alumnus can do much to keep the institution in a right In This Alumni Worldlight before the citizens of the state upon which it must depend for supshyport H e is in a sense its advertising agency If he gets Oltt of touch or out of sympathy with his Alma Mater she thereby suffers a great loss

-Thomas Arkle Clark Long-time Dean of Men Univ of Illinois

NEW LIFE MEMBERS JULY AND AUGUST

H H WAITE 26

BERT S NORLING 26

COL HAROLD G HOLT 15

l1R AND MRS ALLEN MANRING 32

1910 Walter E Rutherford is the owner of Rutherfords Pharmacy in Oakesdale Washington

1923 Mrs Alfred C Schy (Ora West) is living at Lamont Washington The Westss have three children Alfred Lee 6 Alan 4 and Marjorie Jane 2

1924 Mr and Mrs Dorcy D Nog1ey (Ida Hedborg) have one son born March 24 1939 They live at 684 Highland Avenue Glen Ellyn Illinois

1926 J F Gates is Property Officer and Comshypany Quarter Master at Camp Lee Vir-

How To Be A Member In Good Standing of the WSC Alumni

Association Its easy

You send cash money order or check amounting to $150 to the Alumni Office In return you receive a years subscription to the POWWOW official publication of the association printed ten times each year

Now that its on your mind why dont you - this minute - fill out the blank below and join an organization that is growing every day

Life Membership in the organization including years POWWOW $500

Name Class

Address City State

Please find $ for a years membership in the Association

Please bill me for the same amount on c and start sending POWWOW now

ginia He is an Entomologist

Mr and Mrs Harrie O Bohlke are livshying at 9547 - 24th Street N W Seattle Mr Bohlke is in the Industrial Departshyment of the Seattle Chamoer of Comshymerce From 1934 to 1941 he was the chief inspector for the Washington State Rignor Control Board and in 1939 he was in the Grand Lodge of BPOE

1927 Dr Harold Weatherman is a Pediatrician at the Rees-Stealy Clinic in San Diego California He lives at 3531 Arnold Ave

1928 James T Pringle is in the transportation Sales Department of Westinghouse Elecshytric and Manufacturing Company and lives at No 16 - 575 South Negley Aveshynue Pittsburgh Pennsylvania He and his wife (Margaret Palmer x 31) have a 20-month-old baby girl Helen

1930 Clifford E Long is in the United States

Employment Service as Manager and is ~ living at Hood River Oregon He is married and has two children In Janushyi ary 1940 he was given a medical disshy charge from the army with the rank of

Lieutenant At present he is a re-emshy_ ployment committeeman and works on the Selective Service System

Mrs Gara1d L Dixon (Helen Casey) lives at N 5111 Stone Street Bonners Ferry Idaho and has two children Carol Ann 10 and Jane Ellen 8 Mr and Mrs N Harold Squier are living at 850 Sunnyside Chicago Illinois with their nine-year-old daughter Nancy Maria Mr Squier is the training supershyvisor of the Commonwealth Edison and is acting as a teacher and worker in Civilian Defense

1931 Dr Esther M Roehr lives with her Docshytor husband at 903 E John Seattle They have two children Sandra Marie and Karen Eppa Stanley Ray is office nurse and anesthetist for Dr ] F Scott Surgeon in Yakima Washington She and her husband Dr Kenneth C Ray live at 213 N 24th Avenue Yakima Mr and Mrs Leonard W Swanson are living at Eatonville Washington The Swansons have two children Donald Alan 4 and Richard Lennart 1

1933 A Wilfred Welch is the Asst Engineer in the U S Engineer Dept at Eugene Oregon The Mr and Mrs (Verna C Robinson 32) live at 1380 Villord Street with Nancy Gayl their daughter

POWWOW September lUI 10

1934 Dr Marlowe Dittebrandt is a practicing physician in Portland Oregon She lives at the Heathman Hotel Her business adshydress is Room 212 Studio Building

1935 Alfred S Cleveland has been the Adshyministrative Assistant in the U S Deshypartment of Agriculture at Harvard Unishyversity Cambridge Mass In June howshyever he was called into active duty as a Lieutenant (JG) in the U S N R

1936 Rolf B Jorgensen is the Assistant Range Examiner of the U S Forest Service at Saint Anthony Idaho He married Doroshythy L Welch x31 in 1938 and they have one daughter almost two years old

Pauline Thomas is the P E and Health Teacher in the Seattle Public Schools and lives at 1019 Terry Avenue

1937 The chief wine chemist at the Gibson Wine Company in Fort Mitchell Kenshytucky is Wilbur Zeve1y whose address is Rivard Drive Dixie Highway

Robert E Click is Sanitarian in the Yakishyma City-County Health Dept He was treasurer of the Western Washington Dairy Technology Assn during 1941shy1942 406 South 27th Avenue Yakima Washington will reach him

~

Letters From Alums (Continued from Page Four)

Captain Claire Langley 36 sent in this letter to the alumni office recently from the Hawaiian Islands Captain Langleys address is 161st Infantry C O Service Co APO 25 coo P M San Francisco California

Pehea Oe

You see Im getting akamai Hawaiian isnt spoken much but the names are sure nani-if you say em right Its Ho no 100 100 not Hannah Loo lah That makes the kamaaina huhu and pegs you for a malihini And put a soft e on the end of Hawaii like this Hah weye e Thats no pilikia Now that youve had your language lesson Ill tell you someshything about the people and their islands The Hawaiian wahines are beautiful and their kane big and friendly And when they tell me Hele mai e ai they dont have to say that again I just answed Mahalo nui and move right in

Their best work though is Aloha

POWWOW SepCember lUI

Youll find it at the end of this letter But it means much more than just goodshybye Its Hello Love to You Good Morning How ya doing-any kind of a pleasant greeting And if a Hawaiian replies Aloha no believe it not he means Aloha yes Some newcomers get their Hawaiian all mixed up One pupule tourist wrote home that he was sitting on a lei with a lanai round his neck

Whats cookin Maybe a hukilau folshylowed by a big luau Hawaiians bake puaa with vegetables in an underground oven I ts some kaukau Your opu sure sticks out after all that fresh pineapple poi and fish-including one little feller they call humuhumunukunukuapuaa No wonder they say the language has vowel trouble at a lua a keikikane will walk right up an cocopalm in his bare feet and toss you down nuts to drink out of And then theyll shred the leaves and weave you a papale The hula dancers with pua in their hair sure go to town in fresh ti-Ieaf skirts and red muumuu They even put jitter-bugging in the shade And thats no hoopunipuni

But the deal here is surfing at Waikiki Riding a surfboard is a kick but takes practice Ill do mine in an outrigger canoe with a Hawaiian steering When he hollers Huki its lucky that old blue sea is wela for you certainly take a wetshyting as you toboggan down a huge wave Some thrill And no hele wawae back

For directions in Hawaii they tell you to go mauka or makai-thats to the mountains or toward the sea When you Go for broke its called welakahao If you cant understand all this letter look in the corner Thats a good start and when I learn some more Ill write you wikiwiki Good-bye now

Aloha nui

Signed Claire Langley

Helpful hints Pehea oe-Howre you Akamal-clever Nani-beautilul Huhu-angry Kamaalna-old timer lIaJlhini-newcomer Pilika-trouble Wahine-woman Kane-man Hele mal e ai-come In and eat Mahalo nul-thanks Pupule-looney Lei-garland Lanai-verandah Hukilau-net fishing Luau-feast Kelki-kane-boy Puaa-plg Kaukau-food Opu-stomach Papale-hat Pua-flower Muumuu-waist Hoopunlpun-lIe Huki-pull Wela-warm Hele wawae-walk Nul-big Wlklwlkl--quck

in other word Ity JOHN CLINTON

I As the His-CEE pano-Plymshy

outhandI bull grow old toshy~ gether my reshy

s12ect for the old bus inshycreases I think

when at last the war is over and new cars are once more availshyable Ill keep the H-P and have it stuffed

For example the other day one of the Union 011 engineers told me that If the speed of my enshygine were not reduced by the transmission and differential the H-P1ymouth would travel at something like 240 miles per houri Wowl

I never knew

before just tpMwhat the transshymission and _ differential ~ were for But it turns out that they tame the power generated by your engine and apply it in tableshyspoonfuls to the wheels And incidentally theyre two vital departments of your car

The transmission has something like 54 separate parts whizzing around Inside a sealed box It takes special lubricant that will withstand extreme high presshysure to lubricate that stuff 4nd If you let It go more than 5000 miles youre taking chances

Its too technical to explain in this space (even if I could do itl) but if you drive without proper lubricant in the T amp D a very unpleasant thing will hap pen The transmission will fOWl at you and the differentia will huml And once they start theyll never stop til you put in new expensive gears

So start now to have your Union Minute Mencheckyour transmission and differenshytial for you Theyll keep

a~curate records of when the service Is due and notify you to come In But-dont take chance All you get Is a noisy carl

1942 Washington State Football Schedule

Sept 26 Stanford T bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull Palo Alto Oct 3 OREGON Pullman

(Homecoming) Oct 10 MONTANA _ Pullman

(Dads Day) Oct 17 U S C Los Angeles Oct 24 O S C Portland Oct 31 Open Nov 7 Michigan State Spokane Nov 14 Idaho Tmiddotmiddotmiddot bullbullbullbull bull bullbullbullbull bull bullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull Moscow Nov 21 2nd Air Force Spokane Nov 28 Washington Seattle Dec 5 Texas A amp M San Antonio

FRESHMAN SCHEDULE Oct 31 Eastern Washington

College of Education~Pullman Nov 6 Idaho _ Moscow Nov 14 Washington Pullman

For tickets or information write or call OFFICE OF THE GRADUATE

MANAGER State College of Washington

Pullman Washington Telephone 1281

TICKET PRICES

HOMECOMING GAME

Goal to Goal $150

End Zone T 90

High School 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

DADS DAY

Goal to Goal $115

End Zone middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot T 75

High School _ 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

~iJkf

Page 10: ~T rllJJlJll1J P!lWW!lW

The right minded alumnus can do much to keep the institution in a right In This Alumni Worldlight before the citizens of the state upon which it must depend for supshyport H e is in a sense its advertising agency If he gets Oltt of touch or out of sympathy with his Alma Mater she thereby suffers a great loss

-Thomas Arkle Clark Long-time Dean of Men Univ of Illinois

NEW LIFE MEMBERS JULY AND AUGUST

H H WAITE 26

BERT S NORLING 26

COL HAROLD G HOLT 15

l1R AND MRS ALLEN MANRING 32

1910 Walter E Rutherford is the owner of Rutherfords Pharmacy in Oakesdale Washington

1923 Mrs Alfred C Schy (Ora West) is living at Lamont Washington The Westss have three children Alfred Lee 6 Alan 4 and Marjorie Jane 2

1924 Mr and Mrs Dorcy D Nog1ey (Ida Hedborg) have one son born March 24 1939 They live at 684 Highland Avenue Glen Ellyn Illinois

1926 J F Gates is Property Officer and Comshypany Quarter Master at Camp Lee Vir-

How To Be A Member In Good Standing of the WSC Alumni

Association Its easy

You send cash money order or check amounting to $150 to the Alumni Office In return you receive a years subscription to the POWWOW official publication of the association printed ten times each year

Now that its on your mind why dont you - this minute - fill out the blank below and join an organization that is growing every day

Life Membership in the organization including years POWWOW $500

Name Class

Address City State

Please find $ for a years membership in the Association

Please bill me for the same amount on c and start sending POWWOW now

ginia He is an Entomologist

Mr and Mrs Harrie O Bohlke are livshying at 9547 - 24th Street N W Seattle Mr Bohlke is in the Industrial Departshyment of the Seattle Chamoer of Comshymerce From 1934 to 1941 he was the chief inspector for the Washington State Rignor Control Board and in 1939 he was in the Grand Lodge of BPOE

1927 Dr Harold Weatherman is a Pediatrician at the Rees-Stealy Clinic in San Diego California He lives at 3531 Arnold Ave

1928 James T Pringle is in the transportation Sales Department of Westinghouse Elecshytric and Manufacturing Company and lives at No 16 - 575 South Negley Aveshynue Pittsburgh Pennsylvania He and his wife (Margaret Palmer x 31) have a 20-month-old baby girl Helen

1930 Clifford E Long is in the United States

Employment Service as Manager and is ~ living at Hood River Oregon He is married and has two children In Janushyi ary 1940 he was given a medical disshy charge from the army with the rank of

Lieutenant At present he is a re-emshy_ ployment committeeman and works on the Selective Service System

Mrs Gara1d L Dixon (Helen Casey) lives at N 5111 Stone Street Bonners Ferry Idaho and has two children Carol Ann 10 and Jane Ellen 8 Mr and Mrs N Harold Squier are living at 850 Sunnyside Chicago Illinois with their nine-year-old daughter Nancy Maria Mr Squier is the training supershyvisor of the Commonwealth Edison and is acting as a teacher and worker in Civilian Defense

1931 Dr Esther M Roehr lives with her Docshytor husband at 903 E John Seattle They have two children Sandra Marie and Karen Eppa Stanley Ray is office nurse and anesthetist for Dr ] F Scott Surgeon in Yakima Washington She and her husband Dr Kenneth C Ray live at 213 N 24th Avenue Yakima Mr and Mrs Leonard W Swanson are living at Eatonville Washington The Swansons have two children Donald Alan 4 and Richard Lennart 1

1933 A Wilfred Welch is the Asst Engineer in the U S Engineer Dept at Eugene Oregon The Mr and Mrs (Verna C Robinson 32) live at 1380 Villord Street with Nancy Gayl their daughter

POWWOW September lUI 10

1934 Dr Marlowe Dittebrandt is a practicing physician in Portland Oregon She lives at the Heathman Hotel Her business adshydress is Room 212 Studio Building

1935 Alfred S Cleveland has been the Adshyministrative Assistant in the U S Deshypartment of Agriculture at Harvard Unishyversity Cambridge Mass In June howshyever he was called into active duty as a Lieutenant (JG) in the U S N R

1936 Rolf B Jorgensen is the Assistant Range Examiner of the U S Forest Service at Saint Anthony Idaho He married Doroshythy L Welch x31 in 1938 and they have one daughter almost two years old

Pauline Thomas is the P E and Health Teacher in the Seattle Public Schools and lives at 1019 Terry Avenue

1937 The chief wine chemist at the Gibson Wine Company in Fort Mitchell Kenshytucky is Wilbur Zeve1y whose address is Rivard Drive Dixie Highway

Robert E Click is Sanitarian in the Yakishyma City-County Health Dept He was treasurer of the Western Washington Dairy Technology Assn during 1941shy1942 406 South 27th Avenue Yakima Washington will reach him

~

Letters From Alums (Continued from Page Four)

Captain Claire Langley 36 sent in this letter to the alumni office recently from the Hawaiian Islands Captain Langleys address is 161st Infantry C O Service Co APO 25 coo P M San Francisco California

Pehea Oe

You see Im getting akamai Hawaiian isnt spoken much but the names are sure nani-if you say em right Its Ho no 100 100 not Hannah Loo lah That makes the kamaaina huhu and pegs you for a malihini And put a soft e on the end of Hawaii like this Hah weye e Thats no pilikia Now that youve had your language lesson Ill tell you someshything about the people and their islands The Hawaiian wahines are beautiful and their kane big and friendly And when they tell me Hele mai e ai they dont have to say that again I just answed Mahalo nui and move right in

Their best work though is Aloha

POWWOW SepCember lUI

Youll find it at the end of this letter But it means much more than just goodshybye Its Hello Love to You Good Morning How ya doing-any kind of a pleasant greeting And if a Hawaiian replies Aloha no believe it not he means Aloha yes Some newcomers get their Hawaiian all mixed up One pupule tourist wrote home that he was sitting on a lei with a lanai round his neck

Whats cookin Maybe a hukilau folshylowed by a big luau Hawaiians bake puaa with vegetables in an underground oven I ts some kaukau Your opu sure sticks out after all that fresh pineapple poi and fish-including one little feller they call humuhumunukunukuapuaa No wonder they say the language has vowel trouble at a lua a keikikane will walk right up an cocopalm in his bare feet and toss you down nuts to drink out of And then theyll shred the leaves and weave you a papale The hula dancers with pua in their hair sure go to town in fresh ti-Ieaf skirts and red muumuu They even put jitter-bugging in the shade And thats no hoopunipuni

But the deal here is surfing at Waikiki Riding a surfboard is a kick but takes practice Ill do mine in an outrigger canoe with a Hawaiian steering When he hollers Huki its lucky that old blue sea is wela for you certainly take a wetshyting as you toboggan down a huge wave Some thrill And no hele wawae back

For directions in Hawaii they tell you to go mauka or makai-thats to the mountains or toward the sea When you Go for broke its called welakahao If you cant understand all this letter look in the corner Thats a good start and when I learn some more Ill write you wikiwiki Good-bye now

Aloha nui

Signed Claire Langley

Helpful hints Pehea oe-Howre you Akamal-clever Nani-beautilul Huhu-angry Kamaalna-old timer lIaJlhini-newcomer Pilika-trouble Wahine-woman Kane-man Hele mal e ai-come In and eat Mahalo nul-thanks Pupule-looney Lei-garland Lanai-verandah Hukilau-net fishing Luau-feast Kelki-kane-boy Puaa-plg Kaukau-food Opu-stomach Papale-hat Pua-flower Muumuu-waist Hoopunlpun-lIe Huki-pull Wela-warm Hele wawae-walk Nul-big Wlklwlkl--quck

in other word Ity JOHN CLINTON

I As the His-CEE pano-Plymshy

outhandI bull grow old toshy~ gether my reshy

s12ect for the old bus inshycreases I think

when at last the war is over and new cars are once more availshyable Ill keep the H-P and have it stuffed

For example the other day one of the Union 011 engineers told me that If the speed of my enshygine were not reduced by the transmission and differential the H-P1ymouth would travel at something like 240 miles per houri Wowl

I never knew

before just tpMwhat the transshymission and _ differential ~ were for But it turns out that they tame the power generated by your engine and apply it in tableshyspoonfuls to the wheels And incidentally theyre two vital departments of your car

The transmission has something like 54 separate parts whizzing around Inside a sealed box It takes special lubricant that will withstand extreme high presshysure to lubricate that stuff 4nd If you let It go more than 5000 miles youre taking chances

Its too technical to explain in this space (even if I could do itl) but if you drive without proper lubricant in the T amp D a very unpleasant thing will hap pen The transmission will fOWl at you and the differentia will huml And once they start theyll never stop til you put in new expensive gears

So start now to have your Union Minute Mencheckyour transmission and differenshytial for you Theyll keep

a~curate records of when the service Is due and notify you to come In But-dont take chance All you get Is a noisy carl

1942 Washington State Football Schedule

Sept 26 Stanford T bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull Palo Alto Oct 3 OREGON Pullman

(Homecoming) Oct 10 MONTANA _ Pullman

(Dads Day) Oct 17 U S C Los Angeles Oct 24 O S C Portland Oct 31 Open Nov 7 Michigan State Spokane Nov 14 Idaho Tmiddotmiddotmiddot bullbullbullbull bull bullbullbullbull bull bullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull Moscow Nov 21 2nd Air Force Spokane Nov 28 Washington Seattle Dec 5 Texas A amp M San Antonio

FRESHMAN SCHEDULE Oct 31 Eastern Washington

College of Education~Pullman Nov 6 Idaho _ Moscow Nov 14 Washington Pullman

For tickets or information write or call OFFICE OF THE GRADUATE

MANAGER State College of Washington

Pullman Washington Telephone 1281

TICKET PRICES

HOMECOMING GAME

Goal to Goal $150

End Zone T 90

High School 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

DADS DAY

Goal to Goal $115

End Zone middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot T 75

High School _ 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

~iJkf

Page 11: ~T rllJJlJll1J P!lWW!lW

1934 Dr Marlowe Dittebrandt is a practicing physician in Portland Oregon She lives at the Heathman Hotel Her business adshydress is Room 212 Studio Building

1935 Alfred S Cleveland has been the Adshyministrative Assistant in the U S Deshypartment of Agriculture at Harvard Unishyversity Cambridge Mass In June howshyever he was called into active duty as a Lieutenant (JG) in the U S N R

1936 Rolf B Jorgensen is the Assistant Range Examiner of the U S Forest Service at Saint Anthony Idaho He married Doroshythy L Welch x31 in 1938 and they have one daughter almost two years old

Pauline Thomas is the P E and Health Teacher in the Seattle Public Schools and lives at 1019 Terry Avenue

1937 The chief wine chemist at the Gibson Wine Company in Fort Mitchell Kenshytucky is Wilbur Zeve1y whose address is Rivard Drive Dixie Highway

Robert E Click is Sanitarian in the Yakishyma City-County Health Dept He was treasurer of the Western Washington Dairy Technology Assn during 1941shy1942 406 South 27th Avenue Yakima Washington will reach him

~

Letters From Alums (Continued from Page Four)

Captain Claire Langley 36 sent in this letter to the alumni office recently from the Hawaiian Islands Captain Langleys address is 161st Infantry C O Service Co APO 25 coo P M San Francisco California

Pehea Oe

You see Im getting akamai Hawaiian isnt spoken much but the names are sure nani-if you say em right Its Ho no 100 100 not Hannah Loo lah That makes the kamaaina huhu and pegs you for a malihini And put a soft e on the end of Hawaii like this Hah weye e Thats no pilikia Now that youve had your language lesson Ill tell you someshything about the people and their islands The Hawaiian wahines are beautiful and their kane big and friendly And when they tell me Hele mai e ai they dont have to say that again I just answed Mahalo nui and move right in

Their best work though is Aloha

POWWOW SepCember lUI

Youll find it at the end of this letter But it means much more than just goodshybye Its Hello Love to You Good Morning How ya doing-any kind of a pleasant greeting And if a Hawaiian replies Aloha no believe it not he means Aloha yes Some newcomers get their Hawaiian all mixed up One pupule tourist wrote home that he was sitting on a lei with a lanai round his neck

Whats cookin Maybe a hukilau folshylowed by a big luau Hawaiians bake puaa with vegetables in an underground oven I ts some kaukau Your opu sure sticks out after all that fresh pineapple poi and fish-including one little feller they call humuhumunukunukuapuaa No wonder they say the language has vowel trouble at a lua a keikikane will walk right up an cocopalm in his bare feet and toss you down nuts to drink out of And then theyll shred the leaves and weave you a papale The hula dancers with pua in their hair sure go to town in fresh ti-Ieaf skirts and red muumuu They even put jitter-bugging in the shade And thats no hoopunipuni

But the deal here is surfing at Waikiki Riding a surfboard is a kick but takes practice Ill do mine in an outrigger canoe with a Hawaiian steering When he hollers Huki its lucky that old blue sea is wela for you certainly take a wetshyting as you toboggan down a huge wave Some thrill And no hele wawae back

For directions in Hawaii they tell you to go mauka or makai-thats to the mountains or toward the sea When you Go for broke its called welakahao If you cant understand all this letter look in the corner Thats a good start and when I learn some more Ill write you wikiwiki Good-bye now

Aloha nui

Signed Claire Langley

Helpful hints Pehea oe-Howre you Akamal-clever Nani-beautilul Huhu-angry Kamaalna-old timer lIaJlhini-newcomer Pilika-trouble Wahine-woman Kane-man Hele mal e ai-come In and eat Mahalo nul-thanks Pupule-looney Lei-garland Lanai-verandah Hukilau-net fishing Luau-feast Kelki-kane-boy Puaa-plg Kaukau-food Opu-stomach Papale-hat Pua-flower Muumuu-waist Hoopunlpun-lIe Huki-pull Wela-warm Hele wawae-walk Nul-big Wlklwlkl--quck

in other word Ity JOHN CLINTON

I As the His-CEE pano-Plymshy

outhandI bull grow old toshy~ gether my reshy

s12ect for the old bus inshycreases I think

when at last the war is over and new cars are once more availshyable Ill keep the H-P and have it stuffed

For example the other day one of the Union 011 engineers told me that If the speed of my enshygine were not reduced by the transmission and differential the H-P1ymouth would travel at something like 240 miles per houri Wowl

I never knew

before just tpMwhat the transshymission and _ differential ~ were for But it turns out that they tame the power generated by your engine and apply it in tableshyspoonfuls to the wheels And incidentally theyre two vital departments of your car

The transmission has something like 54 separate parts whizzing around Inside a sealed box It takes special lubricant that will withstand extreme high presshysure to lubricate that stuff 4nd If you let It go more than 5000 miles youre taking chances

Its too technical to explain in this space (even if I could do itl) but if you drive without proper lubricant in the T amp D a very unpleasant thing will hap pen The transmission will fOWl at you and the differentia will huml And once they start theyll never stop til you put in new expensive gears

So start now to have your Union Minute Mencheckyour transmission and differenshytial for you Theyll keep

a~curate records of when the service Is due and notify you to come In But-dont take chance All you get Is a noisy carl

1942 Washington State Football Schedule

Sept 26 Stanford T bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull Palo Alto Oct 3 OREGON Pullman

(Homecoming) Oct 10 MONTANA _ Pullman

(Dads Day) Oct 17 U S C Los Angeles Oct 24 O S C Portland Oct 31 Open Nov 7 Michigan State Spokane Nov 14 Idaho Tmiddotmiddotmiddot bullbullbullbull bull bullbullbullbull bull bullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull Moscow Nov 21 2nd Air Force Spokane Nov 28 Washington Seattle Dec 5 Texas A amp M San Antonio

FRESHMAN SCHEDULE Oct 31 Eastern Washington

College of Education~Pullman Nov 6 Idaho _ Moscow Nov 14 Washington Pullman

For tickets or information write or call OFFICE OF THE GRADUATE

MANAGER State College of Washington

Pullman Washington Telephone 1281

TICKET PRICES

HOMECOMING GAME

Goal to Goal $150

End Zone T 90

High School 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

DADS DAY

Goal to Goal $115

End Zone middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot T 75

High School _ 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

~iJkf

Page 12: ~T rllJJlJll1J P!lWW!lW

1942 Washington State Football Schedule

Sept 26 Stanford T bullbullbullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbullbull Palo Alto Oct 3 OREGON Pullman

(Homecoming) Oct 10 MONTANA _ Pullman

(Dads Day) Oct 17 U S C Los Angeles Oct 24 O S C Portland Oct 31 Open Nov 7 Michigan State Spokane Nov 14 Idaho Tmiddotmiddotmiddot bullbullbullbull bull bullbullbullbull bull bullbull bullbullbullbullbullbullbull bull Moscow Nov 21 2nd Air Force Spokane Nov 28 Washington Seattle Dec 5 Texas A amp M San Antonio

FRESHMAN SCHEDULE Oct 31 Eastern Washington

College of Education~Pullman Nov 6 Idaho _ Moscow Nov 14 Washington Pullman

For tickets or information write or call OFFICE OF THE GRADUATE

MANAGER State College of Washington

Pullman Washington Telephone 1281

TICKET PRICES

HOMECOMING GAME

Goal to Goal $150

End Zone T 90

High School 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

DADS DAY

Goal to Goal $115

End Zone middotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddotmiddot T 75

High School _ 50

Enlisted Servicemen 50

~iJkf