1932_1123 ---------- Northwest Viking - 1932 November 23 - Page 1 ---------- - ^ ^ i i ? ' ' ' ^ Vacation Starts Today at 12 M. and Ends November 28 at 8 a. m. Are" You Listeniiniigcr*^ To the Northwest Viking; of jthe Air,KVOS, Fridays, 9:30* nu VOL. 3CXXI1—NO. 9 WASHINGTON STATE NORMAL SCHOOL. BELLINGHAM, WASHINGTON W ---------- Northwest Viking - 1932 November 23 - Page 2 ---------- W ^ H I r V C ^ O N ^ Formerly The Weekly Messenger—Founded 188© Published every Friday except during the month of September by the Associated Students, Washington State Normal School, Bellingham, \ • Entered in the Postoffice at Bellingham, Washington, as second class matter by virtue of the act of March 3, 1879. . Printed-by the Miller Sutherlen Printing Company, Bellingham National Bank Building. Subscription rate by mail;,$1.50 per year, in advance. Advertising rates on application. National Advertising Representatives: hill, Mars Advertising, and Collegiate Agency, of New York City. Ltttell-Murray-Barn- Special Advertising jtfraidTc gt; Live By BOB THOMPSON Address all communications,, other than news items, to the Business Manager of the Northwest Viking, Bellingham, Wash. Telephone 3180 HolHs J. Stoddard. Lorinda Ward Julius Dornblst Soger Chapman...../ Darrow Gwinnup... Bob Roberts . .......Editor-in-Chief .....Associate Editor Assistant Editor .......Business Manager ...Circulation Manager ...Advertising Manager FINEST HOMECOMING r lt;O R NORMAL SCHOOL HOMECOMINGS may come and Homecomings may go; but in this scribe's estimation, Curly Gross presented to us last week-end as fine a two days' entertainment for grads and students as has ever graced the campus and name of Bellingham State Normal. OLD MAN SEHOME must have smiled with satisfaction as he looked down upon the well-managed, good-time-every-minute affair presented to us by the various committees. From the well-executed serpentine and bonfire through the alumni banquet to the'much-praised dance the next evening, there Was .not a single hitch, with the entire student body, grads, and favorable weather lending to the success of the annual affair. • MICKEY CLARK and his frosh dass committee did their big bit in the Homecoming bonfire and wish to extend their thanks and appreciation to all the merchants downtown and the Standard Oil Company for their complete co-operation in furnishing boxes, papers, and oil ;;for the Savage funeral pyre. KENNETH ELDER probably contributed more to the success of the celebration than anyone else on the various committees, but his efforts were more taken for granted than any other job. Thank you, Ken, for many jobs well done. Lensrud's work on the dance was par excellence. Q T H E ^ committees to0 numerous to mention also did their work to the peak of perfection. But the big bouquet goes to Curly Gross* the general chairman, for his splendid work-in directing and aiding his co-workers. • ' • " • ' _ ! _ . o—: — :—-—- A RTHILE ? / SSISTS NORMALITES ' A VOTE OF THANKS goes out from the Normal school to Mr. Art Hile, Mount Baker theatre manager, for his splendid co-operation in presenting jthe Homecoming rally on his, stage last Thursday evening. Everything in his power was done to allow the student entertainment to progress smoothly and with ease to the participants. i j l l m H M JTT nil ."' " — - • " - " •— •- - Not an inconceivable number of hours ago the grapevine telegraph brought to my ear whisperings that the writer has beert designated The Cigar Store Indian, or Old Wooden-Face, or the Mutt With the Immovable Mug, or the: Man in the. Iron Mask, or some other absurdly descriptive misnomer. Lend me your auditory appendages, fellow gladiators, while I predict great wailing and gnashing of teeth when I ,catch up with the unprincipled panhandler that started those malicious, base, unwarranted— albeit flattering—rumors. I plead the opportunity of self-defense, and must necessarily make some limited use of the perpendicular pronoun. Your pardon. My face brings" to me great pain when I stick pins in it—therefore it is not of iron. It has not rusted from occasional applications of water; it has never-r-well, hardly ever—been attracted to a lodestone; it can be penetrated by a vigorous axe—therefore it is not of iron. It is not of wood because no one has ever complained of slivers. ((Perhaps no one has ever had the opportunity, but the fact remains that no one has complained.) Were it of wood I could put in some hinges ,and swinging joints to simulate a grin. But it is of such stuff that it hurts when I smile, stretches the lips, and cracks the skin. I know, because I did laugh once. Was it last week? or a week ago some Tuesday? . Anyway my friends were terribly shocked, and I. haven't yet recovered from the strain and the pain of looking happy. So to preserve the unseamed face of youth I dare not outwardly express my hilarity. And am I jubilant! My goo'ness—my goo'ness, I should say so—positively maniacal. If, in truth, "to cherish enthusiasms is to delude the mind," I guess I'm just one of God's little hallucinated idiots, but I keep the scars in a little cedar chest.at home because, for better or for worse, through sickness and through health, this is the pan I'm wedded to (without benefit of divorce) and must treat it gently. It serves the prime purposes any. face does—keeps my ears apart, forms the initial receptacle for turkey with cranberry sauce, and keeps my backbone from unravelling. What more can man ask? As Atkinson said to the monkey, "You're funny and you're homely as sin—but you're mine and I love you!" But after all—it takes a pretty big dog to weigh a ton and I am not the guy in the iron mask. Kiss me, my fool, for it's all a sham. Ina Kirkman Grecian in spirit and setting is the Festival of Thanksgiving which is given yearly by the training school at its pre-Thanksgiving assembly. This symbolic presentation of the harvest time and the spirit of doing for others is as much a well-loved tradition to the children as the annual Homecoming is to the Normal students, and suggestions to substitute other observances .•meet with little favor. The pageant was staged at 11 o'clock this morning in the auditorium with teachers and parents as invited guests. SCREEN i£ Preston A. Wright (Credit for the form of the festival is givert to the Francis Parker school, University of Chicago. In past years the speeches have been rewritten by the pupils of the training school, but this season a verbatim reproduction was given. So effective is the pageant that graduates of Normal who have witnessed it here are starting it in other schools of the state. Actual gifts of money and food were brought to school by the children and. at the close of the festival were given to the Red Cross milk fund and to the Bellingham Family Welfare Association. Committees from the various grades met with Miss Rich earlier in the month to arrange details, and the rehearsals were sectional, no full performance with •• the Normal orchestra being necessary. ROOSEVELT TUMBLERS ALLY FOR VIKINGS T H E FOUR 5 T U D E N T S from Roosevelt high school in Seattle who performed between halves at the Homecoming game last week-end deserve a great big hand and a vote of thanks."* Their antics kept the crowd interested, amused, and entertained, and provided a great deal toward the success of the game, from the spectators' standpoint. Their efforts were highly appreciated. o : An oboe is an ill wind that nobody blows good. This harvest festival is the only formal program given by the training school during the school year. Due to its serious spirit, and to the fact that even those children not on the stage are a part of the celebration, printed programs contained the request that the guests should not applaud. The stage was hung with black, and gold panels were a background for the throne of the goddess of the festival. A Grecian bench was seen at one side, balanced by clumps of green. At either corner of the stage were large terra cotta urns made by the sixth grade. Much Credit Due Committee Heads forTheir Labor In,regard to the Homecoming program and the committees in charge of various phases of the event, Curly Gross, general chairman, wishes to take this opportunity to "express his appreciation for the fine work done by his several committees." "Johnny Lensrud, Ken Elder, Jim Campbell and Eldon Bond deserve a world of credit for their work in the arrangement of the bonfire, luncheon, dance, decorations and programs. Ijew Lovegren, Doris McEl-jnon, Frank Forstrom, Florence Ford ^and Robert Becken contributed generously at the Homecoming lunche o n program as did Virge Griff en, Jiarry Cramer and Lew Lovegren at the Homecoming dance last Saturday evening." 'Gross, the man at the helm, said in regard to the program, "Every- 1 .thing ran smoothly, and we tried our best to place a successful Homecoming before the students." . - • • \ : ' . • ' ' • • ' — o New Books Move In Reading Room students who read for pleas-; ure' whl^find that i;he best books'are 4 and put,Ton^^s3peciat' 'sheu4' at the ^InOT^flitlfir^^ are At The Theatres MT. BAKER THURS., NOV. 24—On the stage, "Georgia Minstrels." Forty people. FRI., SAT.,, SUN., NOV. 23, 26, 27 —On the stage, Jackie Merkle, 6- year-old Mental Marvel, and "The Big Broadcast." MON., TUES., NOV. 28, 29—John Barrymore and Billie Burke in "Bill of Divorcement." AVALON THURS., FRI., SAT.—"The Heart of New York," with George Sidney, Smith Dale; also "The Crooked Circle," with Zasu Pitts, Jimmy Gleason, Ben Lyon. SUN., MON., TUES., WED.—"Merrily We Go to Hell," with Sylvia Sidney, Fredric March; also "False Faces," Lowell Sherman, Peggy Shannon, Lila Lee. AMERICAN THURS., FRI.—Edmund Lowe and Victor McLaglen in "Guilty as Hell"; also Tim McCoy in "Cornered." SAT. ONLY—Buster Keaton in "*. "Speak Easily." SUN., MON., TUES.—"Kongo," with Lupe Velez, Walter Huston. — lt;J changed regularly. ' : On display in the lower hall are many interesting things which also change, also in this display are methods iin; which students may; add totheir'note bookiv; Duringthe past summer, t h e ilibrary j ha* added about one thousand-books arid1 'there is-A' I complete; indera cbfAfcndsen books,; d $ ithWchargk^Seetf.!, ^lix'd c^T : •f.i:i ^ ' U . ; '/!" -1- Dun ji.'J'hiiC gt;; n .•• The; girls 6£;El^NidfijLodge gays;* i Homecoming dinner Sunday,/.; •,jp# i ! lve girls attended, including a guest, Jlifiss^ath«rirfe^Stt6wr-6f BelUrighsin' NAMES FEATURE (Continued from Page One) so we're Contento. We have among us several Fishers, but no fish. I apcSpgize. I forgot myself. We have two Millers and some Mills, a Porter, a Potter, a Chandler, a Cook and three Taylors. We've two Gables, a Lock, but no key. A Caddy, but no clubs. There is here a Krafft, but no limburger. (Thank God!) We've a Kellogg, but no bran flakes, but we've some Sperry so we'll use it. We've a Bacon and ---------- Northwest Viking - 1932 November 23 - Page 3 ---------- W A S r t t t i G T O N CT^ DORMITORY HOLDS THANKSGIVING TEA Annual Holiday Dinner Is Served :.. \ Tuesdayv November 22 Music Prof Bf^ Wide \^rsatility of Interests ... i0 A' Thanksgiving tea was held in V Edens Hall last Sunday, November 20, beWeen:5:30 and 6:30 p. m. It was ari open house affair with all students at the school invited, together with a number of the faculty. A Varied program was given. x Committees were: Refreshment, June McLeod; invitation, Ruby Miller, chairman, Louise Contento, Helen' Nbrthen; decoration, Gwen Eder, chairman, Evelyn. Clark, E v e l yn Lihgg; Dorothy Kelly, Helen Klumb; entertainment, * Madolyn S n i d e r, chairman, Margaret Hendricks. -^-'Thanksglviiig Dinner Held -Cm Tuesday, Nov. 22, Edens Hail had its annual Thanksgiving dinner. The dining hall was appropriately decorated and the dinner was served by candlelight. A program was given during courses. Doris Jurgensen was chairman of the decoration committee, aided by Margaret Jorgensen, Connie Inger-son, Bernice Osgood, Jane O'Neill, and Peggy David. The entertainment committee was composed of Doris Griffith and Marie de Gullier. -r-r. : - ^ 0 -^ FIVE AS GUESTS AT BARTON HALL By Mary Fisher Sooner df later all the "big shots" around school are forced to break down and "confess all" to the curious, callous reporter. The latest victim is our'new substitute music teacher, Mr. Don Bushell, of the class of 1931 of the University of Washington. Now we discovered that Mr. Bushell is indeed a very versatile person. Of course music, comes first in his long line of interests and in this he is extremely well-versed. Besides being able to play the piano and sing "passably" he is an accomplished cello player, as he will demonstrate in an assembly of the very near future. Although on graduation he received a degree from the school of education, Mr. Bushell has been doing graduate work in the music department since that time. He is a member of national honorary mus- Students Will Go To I. R. C. Meet Among the girls who were guests of Barton Hall over the Homecoming were: Lovia Wieger and Mary Hibbs of Seattle; Effie Necula of Olympia; and Jean Dobers of Anacortes; and Katherine Rose of Lynden. •'- ~ o—• . Johnson Relates Vacation Sojourn "We left Bellingham, Saturday, Aug. 20, on our cross-country tour," said Miss Florence Johnson, Normal Hygiene .teacher, when we asked her about her vacation. . "By 'we', I mean Miss Sadie Fitzgerald/ training school teacher, and I. This was my first auto tour and I enjoyed it very .much. "The first, part of pur trip extended into Utah, Wyoming and the Inland Empire.. We visited Yellowstone National Park and the Tieton mountains, and it was in these mountains that we saw the most majestic scenery of our trip. "The usual route from these states to the Atlantic coast is through comparatively familiar country, so we diverged from the prescribed highway and went into the Southern states. Kentucky is like one vast park, with its beautiful estates. Virginia was the most beautiful state that we visited. Its charming atmosphere of the real old South-is irresistible. In Lexington we visited Washington and Lee University, which is famous for its traditional 'Colonial Ball. "A peculiar thing that we noticed in the South Was that all universities and colleges are for men, while teachers' colleges are for women. Another strange thing was that girls are not allowed to go down town without a hat, since that would mark them as definitely lower class. "From Virginia, we went northward to Atlantic City, where we did all the usual things. Miss Fitzgerald's home is near Camden, New Jersey, so she left me there, and I returned home by train." V- ' Representatives- from the International Relations and Social Science clubs will motor to Seattle to take in the annual International Relations Conference of the Pacific Northwest Universities at the University of Washington Friday " and Saturday, November 25 and 26. V Delegates from the International Relations club are: Julius Dornblut, Joseph Atkinson, Kenneth Bernet, Flprence Wilson, Thomas Nelson. The 'Social Science delegates are: Sybil Richardson, Waco; Texas Foster, Eloise Rankin, and Victor Dickinson. The conference will be divided into three round tables. The first will deal with recent developments in the Far East, and the second with results of the Disarmament Conference. The third round table will consider the present world economic situation with special reference to the Lausanne • and Ottawa conferences. '. r-r—O MARRIAGE OF FORMER STUDENT TAKES PLACE ical. fraternity, and as a Supreme Councilman will attend, during the Christmas vacation, the society's national convention in Washington, D. a ;.'•• But running a close second to muT sic is Mr. BushelTs flare for bridge. We'll wager he could put in their places some of the bridge fiends who hang around the Women's League room. Just give him a chance! He. is an enthusiastic football, baseball and track fan; won an in-, door track meet during his High school days; and was coxswain of the Frosh crew during his Univer-r sity days. Now do you agree Jhat he's versatile? * This is the music prof's comment about the Normal: "I am very much impressed with the aims of the in-' stitutibn and the quality of the students, and I am very happy to be here." , . — • — ^ - — 0 :—- • HOMECOMING DANGE IS HELD AT ARMORY John Lensrud and Jim Campbell in Charge of Jolly Hop VISITORS ARRIVE AT RAGAN HOUSE Grads and students danced oh the ocean surrounding the good ship Viking at the Homecoming held at the Armory Saturday night. Rollicking melodies issued from the boat as. Jack Burn's eight-piece orchestra made the ship's masts quiver. Orange punch slaked the thirst of the gay dancers. The intermission number kiven by Lew Lovegren was heartily encored. Lpyegren;s solos we. re accompanied by Ethel Page'.'.' John Lensrud and Jim Campbell were in charge of the jolly hop. •——O- ; _ MANOR IS ACTIVE HOUSE THIS FALL PLYMPTON HEARS ARTISTS LECTURE Professor. Steinhoff of Vienna Presents. Work Navarra Hennings has as her guests during Homecoming and the Thanksgiving holidays her sisters, Wyona and Edwina and her brother Bonyhge Hennings. Lucile De Pue, sister of Doris De Pue was a recent week-end visitor at Ragan House. Mildred Padgett, of Willapa, Washington visited with Marjorie Shay over the week-end. Greta Price was a guest at Rag-ans during Homecoming. JUDD OF VANCOUVER ADDRESSES Y. W. C." A. MEETING TUESDAY FLU, FOOTBALL CAUSE ABSENCE Announcement has been made of the marriage of Miss Eleanor Mal^ cotte and Mr. Robert Weidman, which took place in Chicago on September. 9'. . . . Mr. Wiedman is the son of Bel-lingham's superintendent of schools, D. E. Wiedman. He was a well-known student at Normal, after which he took an eight month's course at the Worsham College of Embalming from which he received a diploma last August. At present Mr, Wiedman is em? ployed in the steward's department of the Grand. Trunk Railway coin^ pany at-Lansing, Mich. After December 1, he will be associated with the O'Brien funeral parlors, in Chicago. Catherine.; Hqllis spent the weekend visiting parents in Arlington. Bernice Persohn visited friends at Barnet, B. C., oyer the week-end. Marie Thompson enjoyed a visit with friends in Langley over the week-end. Myrna Hammett spent thte weekend in Sedro-Woolley. Jim Davis was a week-end guest of the Ananias club. ' ' o NEWS OF DOWN'S HALL An open meeting of the Y. W. C. A. cabinet last Tuesday evening was addressed by the Rev. C. H. Judd, of Vancouver, B. C, secretary of the China Inland Missions, Pacific Northwest. The Rev. Mr. Judd included in his message news of three former Normal students, now in China, Bessie Huntamer, '30, who is studying at the language school at Yangchow, Ku province; Lillian Jacobson, '30, who is in the missionary field in Shansi province, and Nina Gemmell, '19, teaching in the Shanghai ---------- Northwest Viking - 1932 November 23 - Page 4 ---------- fSlw^9K9w^l^ W^HIN^^JST^ c Dopesters' Predictions Are Upset Immediately After First Score- Seems to Vindicate Prophecy wiswwjizm VARIED AND Sinko, Smith, Beaton, Flint Star Concentrating the efforts of a season into one last Herculean attempt feturn^^tide pf victo^ in •theu^wir^ai^^ Viktags last Saturday, afternoon exhibited a stalwart brand;of football that saw them outplay the heavier and favored. Cheney Savages most of the way, only to lose the game because.^ of a blocked, place kick. In the opening minute of play, the boys in red caught the blue and white-clad gridsters with a series of unsuspected plays, culminating in a beautiful and perfectly-executed pass thrown by Peterson to Tilson who had scampered down to the •five-yard line, completely clear of Bellingham's secondary defense. After this shocking score and a nice place kick for the try-for-point, the large Homecoming crowd in the grandstand became suddenly depressed- by the thought—"It's going to be a bad day." . . . But,it wasn't! Vikings Aronsed The Vikings got sore and, spurred oh by the shouts of encouragement from the stands and the never- failing fight and enthusiasm of Captain Sulkosky, they were fired with real spirit and played dashing, heads-up football the rest of the game. The second quarter saw a poor quick-kick by Cheney's Peterson, which put theball in Bellingham's possession oh the 30-yard stripe. On the next play, and the prettiest of the game, Sinko caught the pass from center and made a bee-line for the right end. Two maroon-shirt-ed warriors came into the line of interference but Beaton smacked into the first one and Bagley put forth one supreme effort and by a beautiful block, paved the pathway to the goal line which was finally reached after Sinko had zig-zagged through a broken field. Play immediately after the touchdown moved into Cheney territory, and remained there during a large - part of the first two periods. Bel-viingham tried a long pass toward the closing minutes of the first half and, although it was incomplete, the umpire ruled that Day, right half, had interfered with the receiver, giving the Vikings the pigskin on the ten-yard stripe. Just as the crowd began yelling "We want a touchdown!" the gun ended the Blue's chance to win the ball game:' - Second Half Panting Duel The second half was fought on When Walt Sinko raced twenty-five yards for the Vikings' only score Saturday the Pollack from Raymond made history. In four battles,-1928 to 1931 inclusive; the Vikings have been unable to cross the Cheney goal line so'" this homecoming battle will be long remembered in tthe Sinko household Today, Sinko has one ambition, just to be here next year when the Ellensburg Wildcats come to town, and give the newspapers something to write about. In the last six starts against the Wildcats ttieWikings havecome out on the short end of the score, but Siiiko, is determined to puta blemish on EUensburg's record. Saturday's game only goes to prove that the Vikings are not so crummy as a football team after all. Being doped by gt;most ofK the ^dopesters to take i t on^the^cWn fti^^o"^certain manner the Vikings battled the Sav- Association Organize* ih A*f-Y2[and Has Grown Extensively Intramural Heads ide on Program Of/of. ages to a standstill. Taking a team that had lost its first four starts, Saturday's exhibition was one that will be remembered for quite a spell, and here's a personal tribute to the squad: "There's been plenty of good teams that have worn the Blue and White, but you will have to go back a long tgime to find a team with as much fight and courage as the Vikings showed us Saturday, and that's saying plenty." With the final curtain rung down on the football schedule, all hands are turning to the hoop sport. In another section of todays paper you will find the intramural hoop schedule. Jt wouldn't be a bad idea Jo save this schedule for future reference. In my two years at Normal! m positive that no other branch of the .intramural program has kept the interest of the students, both boys and girls, as Well as the basketball program. The prospects for a successful season are nil. With only two veterans back from last year's squad, Coach Carver lies awake nights trying to devise ways and means of keeping the Vikings in the running. So far' the new material hasn't as yet come up to J. V. standards but with the starting of winter quarter early in January the Viking mentors are hoping for a change of luck. The report is going around that Clint McBeath, a star performer from the '31 squad, will hop into harness the first of the year. McBeath, together with Rork and McNeil, will lighten the weight considerably and if only someone could induce the curriculum.committee to offer a few more courses it Wouldn't be any trick at all to convince Occie Thorsen that school is a pretty good place after all. ._3t»jauvj ROCKETS #EAWC TWENTY CANDIDATES SEEK TEAM BERTHS Two Veterans, Rork and McNeil, to be Team Nucleus. If looks aren't deceiving you fans should have stepped out on the football field Saturday. It. looked nice, but OH my, the muck and mud was only four inches deep underneath the sawdust. A Homecoming game billed, advertised and all that goes with it without a Cheney team. That was the possibility up until about 12:30 Saturday. At thai hour Coach Carver hadnt heard hide nor hair of the Savages. No wonder the worried look on his countenance. wmMim even terms and was largely productive of a punting duel between Peterson, Cheney's full, and Smith and Beaton who were doing some nice booting for Bellingham. The boys ;in the flaming shirts made two attempts to score in the last period but both fell materially short of their goal. Their first onslaught was stopped when Peterson was forced to kick into the end zone, and then Beaton ended "their second effort by intercepting a long pass. Toward the end of the game, after a punting exchange, Sinko, playing safety, scooped up.a quick kick and dashed about thirty yards through 'a scattered defense. Followed a nice pass. Smith to Sinko, that carried the ball well into enemy territory; but Cheney Wok the pill on downs as the game ended. Vikings Show Up Well ' Finley, playing a whole game for the first time in his football career, threw every pass from center With accuracy and played a bang-up game on defense; along with the never-tiring Sulkosky and the hard-c h a r g ^ (PUnt,, lie looked outstanding in the line. Bagley did some nifty blocking and his share of gaining •^0p0''^aiar, before h lt;^re-hurt his anklel Smko Went great guns, With his hips shifting as smoothly life/ever. But -.'-tlite'-'tti!^the short i t w o r k o n r ^ d e f e n « , andhard The work of Pinley, Sulkosky and Flint on the line was outstanding, while Beaton, Bagley and Sinko played a whale of a game in the backfield, one that will remain a long time in the minds of the homecoming grads. - Football season ending today, attention will be turned to the coming basketball squad. The first' official turnout was held on Monday night, with twenty enthused performers answering the call. Two Vets Back Coach Sam Carver will build his team around two veterans, Jim Rork who was center and guard for three years and A! McNeil, who' played guard last year. Clint McBeath, spark plug of last year's team, may come back to school for the winter quarter. His services will'add' great strength to the 1933 quintet. The Vikings will enter . but one team in the City .league this year. In the past two teams have been entered, but the class A league being dropped this year causes the super varsity to discontinue; Pop Gunn's Junior varsity will enter the city league again. Pop's team won the city championship in the class B league last.season and hopes to keep his team on the top again. - " * • • • . • ' .• Many Positions Open Many positions are open due to graduation and men dropping out of school. There is' much competition for a berth on' the varsity. The new material looks promising for a fair ball club. Candidates turning out are: Robinson, Lewis,. Clark, Moser, Nolte, Sorenson, Carter, Irby, Stoddard, Miles, Zoet and Fisher. After resting from football. Flowers, Sulkosky, Gable and Sinko will be battling for a position on the team —: rO- • Frosh Art Course Popular Elective With nine basketball lettermen turning out and another expected back next-quarter, Leo Nicholson, of Ellensburg, is riding very high. Good men are so plentiful at the Wildcat school that he plans to farm out the surplus material—some schools have all the luck. Just a tip. U.ofW., 0; U. of Southern Cal., 18. ' •———o- '; The Normal school was well represented on the boat from Seattle last Sunday night. Those aboard were Paul Jackson, BUI Fisher, Glen Rockey, Ray; Sulkosky^and AT Charlesworth.'\.~":%"'•-([_%.%;:,3;•"••...' '•;'.[. . Mai^refr Peterson s^ end in Langley. - Alma Fender visited with friends and relatives to Sedco^wi^ pve^. j^-weel^end; gt; •••';.-. )":[ :'':^ ^ O ^ Conner moiwed to Stair©--; Art I is a correlation of art, PPPPP