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Start -Homecoming Work Now!. CHING FU SAYS: It’s not what you're got, but what you air. Tuesday, October 1, 1935 Published by Associated Students ARIZONA STATE TEACHERS COLLEdE, FLAGSTAFF, ARIZONA*" Volume XXIII—No. 3 PWA Assures Campus Rejuvenation Pine To Sponsor Royalty Election King, Q ueen For Huge Fete To Be Elected Couple Will Hold Honored Posts In Parade, Dance _ And Banquet Pine To Scoop Results Of Election To Be Held Until Next Issue Of The Pine Students of Arizona State Teachers college .ynll have the opportunity of naihing their most popu lar co-ed arid collegian on the campus next Friday morning when they g ather in Ashurst auditorium - to select their Homecoming king and queen. LarfC year . the honor of being the cbmpus royalty fell to Miss Helen Gibbons and Chester Fuller. This year, however, because Fuller has graduated, the field will be open to all male competition without any male who has held the position. Miss Gibbons is still a registered student, and is expected to be among the likely candidates; The election, held annually by the J*INE, will not be made lengthy by unnecessary nominations and procedure, but will be carried .on by. giving each student a piece of paper on which-'he is to write the name of Iris choice for king and queen of Homecoming. After the votes have been collected, they will be counted by the editorial staff of the PINE, As the s t o iy i s ^ "P IN E scoop, no information will be given out or published until the next issue of tbm PINE. ho king and queen elected next Friday will have the supreme Won-or of leading the Homecoming parade and of being the guest^/of honor a t the dance and bafiquet, aside from being considered the most popular couple on the campus. The PINE urges that all faculty members and students to be present a t the required assembly next Friday and help pick the campus ro y alty Open Forum House Now Available For Discussion G r o u p s Open Forum may again hold its discussion and debates if the club can be reorganized. Dr. Tormey, to whom the fate of the Forum House was assigned, told the PINE th at the house will be open to all discussion groups, but to these groups only. The Open Forum house was built by the students under the direction of the Forum advisers, Dr. Hill and Miss Lynn, and was paid for by the annual Lumberjack Follies. Faculty forum will occasionally be held' in the Open Forum hou^e. The faculty forum program begins on October 15, a t 8:00 p. m., at which time Dr. Victor Kelley will speak on the recent developments in the improvement of instruction of bi-linguals. On November 17 a t 2:30 p. m. Miss Bess Chappell will speak on homemaking in the Orient. Dean Milliara Tinsley will talk on America’s preparedness policy on December 4, a t 8 p. m. Faculty Will Entertain At Soiree Wed. Annual Party To Include Five Hundred Flagstaff Townspeople • President Tormey and the faculty of the Arizona State Teachers college will entertain 500 F lagstaff guests at a faculty soiree on Wednesday evening, October 2, at 8 o’clock in Ashurst auditorium. The soiree is an annual affair presented by the faculty to further the growing interest between the college and F lagstaff townspeople. Invitations have beeri n«mt to Mr. M. R. Tilloteon, superintendent of the Grand Canyon national park, and to Mr. Larry Williams of Williams, as well as to the leading citizens of Flagstaff. Mrs. Grace Crose, critic teacher, is general chairman of the affair. Mrs. Catherine Beckwith h a s charge of decorations and is being assisted* by Mr. Cree and Miss Klonda Lynn. The entertainm ent program has not as yet been announced, but something unusual is promised. Varied Assembly Programs To Be Given In Future There will be no assembly Wednesday, October 2, as this time has been set aside each month for religious groups to hold their meetings. Chester F. Dearer hopes this time will be used by the religious groups as suggested. Ordinarily in other schools Chapel is held some time during each week or month, but it was decided by the assembly committee to give one Wednesday each month to individual religious group meetings instead of a chapel for everyone. On October 9, Mary G. Boyer has charge of the Homecoming program. Last year’s program gave a contrast between the old and new of Homecoming at Flagstaff. Mrs. Bessie Kidd Best on October 15 will have charge of a program to be given by the children of Maine school. On October 23, according to present plans by Mr. Deaver, Mrs. Isabella Greenway, Arizona congresswoman, will speak to the students. Music R e f e r e n c e Library At College Is Being Planned Adding to ita library of phonographic records, the music department of F lagstaff State Teachers college has ordered albums which will include a set of records depicting the early history of music from 270 B. C. to the time of Bach. Also -included will be records of music since Bach. The new victor book of symphonies and Bouer’s "20th century music” are among additions. Such a library has not been available to Flagstaff. I t will be a general reference library, for use of both students and townspeople. Prof. Eldon A. Ardrey, head of the department, announced arrangements are being made for a suitable room for the library. “It is unusual for schools or libraries to be able to furnish such reference work, and as the equipment i* of great value, it is necessary that greatest care be given it,” he said. Heads Homecoming Mitts Mary G. Boyer, above, is rapidly completing plana for making the 1935 Homecoming one of the best in Lumberjack history. Library Adds Many Books During Year 7110 People Used Our Library From November 1934 To June 1935 Since November, 1934, the library' has received 1271 new books, 5010 new pamphlets, 390 mounted pictures, and six maps. The total-dum ber of people using the library, during the months of November to June was 7140, not counting those reading reserved books. Of these 605 were faculty members, 492 were townspeople and correspondence students. Two weeks circulation amounted to 28,268; of this 545 were pamphlets, 2138 were pictures. July holds the record for two weeks circulation. * June holds the record for reserve book circulation. Reserved books circulated over night during these months was 7941; there has been no count taken of those used in the reading room during the day. Besides furnishing reading material, the library is equipped to keep it in good condition by doing its own minor repairing, such ad restoring loose pages, backs, etc. All books needing rebinding are sent to a bindery. Pi Kaps Hold Spanish Feed For P led g es Faculty Sponsor, Dr. Kelley, Attends As Twenty- Six Gather Biller Presides I # __ [ Plan Stttfc 4*tenie To Be Held In Oak Creek In October | At an informal Spanish dinner i held at Miguel’s cafe Sunday evening, September 29, members of | the Pi Kappa Epsilon fraternity entertained approximately 16 prospective pledges. With 12 members of the fra t in attendance and with Dr. Kelley, faculty sponsor, present, a brief outline of Pi Kappa Epsilon purpose and procedure was outlined to the fraternity guests. According to Harry Biller, president of Pi Kaps, continued activity throughout the year will be the goal of the organization. Plans are completed for a stag picpic to be held in Oak Creek canyon during the month of October, with the definite date to be announced in the near future. Those attending the dinner were Mepibers Sid Knudsen , Walter Tocco, Jeff Ferris, Kenny Hurl-bert, John Herrera, Jack Blair, James Williams, Robert Eunson, Tommy Tucker and H arry Biller. Guests were Dr. Kelley, Emmett DeVaney, Bob Monroe, A rt McNeil, John Aston, Vic Sheffield, Don Clark, Joe-Tissaw, Ed Eckert, Jim Patterson, Sam Ilitsky, Robert Fish, Charles Osterberg, Paul Herrera, John Gault, Sid Smith, Virgil Crowley and Ted Krupp. Omicron Kappa Gamma Pledges Raise Club Funds New members of Omicron Kappa Gamma, home economics club, took over the concessions a t the game and sold pop com last Saturday to raise money for the club fund. The fund is to be used for social entertainments during the year. A banquet will be held soon after Homecoming. New members are Guinola Robinson, M a r e D * Mario, Joie A j t J - c s u T J»iu m, M ary Bowie, Wilma Faulkner and Melba Flake. D e ba t e r s Meet To Plan Coming Debate S e as on The Debate club under leadership of Pi Kappa Delta President Reed Freeman, met last Wednesday evening at 7 o’clock to begin initial plans for the coming debate season. The national Pi Kappa Delta question has been received: Resolved, th at Congress should have power to reverse any 4-5 decision of the Supreme Court by a two-thirds vote. The entire club at present is working on the Junior Speech Arts League debate question, Resolved, th at the U. S. government should adopt a plan of pensioning persons over 60 years of age a t the rate of $50 a month, provided the annual income is under $500 and property is under $1000 valuation. Practice debates begin Wednesday evening, October 2, with Ray Davis and Virgil Crawley upholding the negative and Carl Freeman and John Miller upholding the affirmative side of the queafcion. All lower division students are eligible for junior division debating and upper division students are eligible to debate the national question. Debates which the club is l o o f ing forward to with special interest are the Junior Speech Arta meet at Tempe this fall; PI Kappa Delta practice tournam ent a t San Francisco, Calif., near Thanksgiving time, and the national tourna-ment at Houston, Tex., n ex t spring. j g r o y • Herbert Swick came up from Miami, Ariz., to see the game last Saturday. SUPER COLLEGIATE CUT IS OFFERED TO BURY INMATES Armed with three pairs of scissors, one comb, and high hopes of training a barber to take over the college free haircut business, Joe Glasson. Jim Dunbar, Tom Tucker, and Edwin Eckert officially opened the Bury hall barber shop in room 13 last Sunday when Keith Couch obtained the Collegiate Cut. Due to lack of bowls and other tools, the barbers offer a free super*-coH*giate bowl cut to anyone who will contribute implements to the economizing cause. Keith is recovering fine. It is thought that he will be able to remove the adhesive tape before Homecoming. Bids On New Building To Open Oct. 11 President Tormey Announces A. S. T. C. Campus To Be Improved R e m o d e l i n g Homecoming Conflagration To Burn High Bonfire To Include Sophomore Paddles And Telephone Booths Aplenty The take-off for this year’s Homecoming events will be fu rnished by an amassed conflagration of every collectible—from sophomore paddles to telephone booths. Through the freshman efforts, the traditional bonfire, the night before Homecoming, is expected to blaze higher and brighter than ever before. The sophomores are requesting each freshmah to do his share and contribute anything that will burn, either personal or otherwise, so that Homecoming will s ta rt up with a blaze. A1 West, Chain Gang leader, will direct the work of collecting suitable material. Just after dusk, the grriht pyre will be lighted and the savage inm ates“of A. S. T. C. will emerge tq gloat over the blazq and then p?3nce off to the rally in anticipation of chalking up another mark for the Lumberpack team. The sophomore paddles will probably not be too evident because it is rumored th at the freshmen intend to help the fire along with some of those hot, stinging ones. Forensic Society Meets To Shape Debate Question The second meeting of the Forensic society was held Wednesday evening to shape up the plana for the Junior debate question. The questibn, as announced at the first meeting, has to do with the old age pension. Reports by Virgil Crawley and Ray Davis gave some high lights on the subject and then Dr. Hill contributed some well-founded arguments. The meeting served to crystallixc the question still more, ard assignments which included a preliminary debate wet* given for the next meeting. Crawley and Davis to defend the negative, while Miller and Carl Freeman are to upbold the negative. The membership of the organization has increased over the previous meeting. Tho'W attending were President Reed Freeman, Secretary Inez Udall, Jeanne^- son, Arman PftfepW, Vernon liken, Victor Sheffield, Ray Davia. Virgil Crawley, Lamar Shelley, Mabel McKnight, Olga Kulinovieh, Tom Slade, Gwendolyn Pace, John Miller, Sara Bodily and Carl Free- New Girls’ Dormitory And Dining Hall To Be Built Actual assurance of a vastly improved campus in the near future was made known at Flagstaff last week when Dr. Tormey, president of the college, announced that bids on the new $380,000 building project will be opened October 11. The plans now call for a new girls’ dormitory, netf dining hall, addition and remodeling of Taylor hall, addition to heating plant, and new president’s residence. The new project will rectify the crowded conditions now Buffered by the students a t the F lagstaff institutions. Work is progressing rapidly on the college training school building th at is being done under PWA administration, as will the new Iwildings on the campus. These bids will be opened this month by the members of the col-> lege board at the Flagstaff State college. ;These ’members are p r . H. E. Hendrix, state sufterintend-it of instruction, chairman; Earl C. Slipher, secqretary, and Chandler M. Wood, member. The project h ai been hanging fire since the last meeting of the stafe legislature and it is hoped th at the buildings will be ready for «9c by next n il. The present work th at is being done on the old training school bttilding will tnake {t a completely remodeled school structures At pYesent the training school students are being cared for in the old main building. I t is planned to hjtve the regular building ready next month some time. Campbell Hall Elects Officers Campbell hall women held an election meeting last week In Campbell hall living room. Ruth Powles was elected president; “Brix" -Moore, vice-president; jOlga Kulinovieh, secretary, and Dorothy Peach, social manager. Plans for Homecoming were discussed and a committee to arrange a Homecoming float was chosen. Those chosen on the committee are Peggy Way, M ary Morse and Ruthanna Jackson. CALENDAR Wedneaday, October 1 Morton hall party—Sophomore women entertain freshmen women ——0:15 p. m. Pi Kappa Epsilon, .9:80, Bury hall lobby. Thuraday, Detober 2 Newman club meeting, room 32, 10:45 p. m. Faculty entertains townspeople —Aafeurst auditorium, 8:30 p. m. Friday, October S Newman club party, St. Anthony’* hall, 8:00 p. m. Satwday. October 5 Foptball—New Mexico Aggies S. T. C., Skidmore field, 2:80 dance, sophomore class honora freshman class and visiting team, 8:30 p. m. Eliaabeth Glenn spent the weekend with her parents in Cottonwood, Aria.
Object Description
Rating | |
Item number | 1935_10_01 |
Creator | Northern Arizona University. Associated Students. |
Title | The Pine, October 1, 1935. |
LCCN | sn94050595 |
Volume | 023 |
Issue | 03 |
Date | 1935-10-01 |
Type | Text |
Physical format | Newspaper |
Collection name | Northern Arizona University: The Pine |
Language | English |
Repository | Northern Arizona University. Cline Library |
Rights | Digital surrogates are the property of the repository. Reproduction requires permission. |
County | Coconino |
Subjects | Northern Arizona University--Students--Newspapers |
Places | Flagstaff (Ariz.)--Newspapers |
Master file name | 1935_10_01.pdf |
Master file creation date | 2014-03-27 |
Master file size | 10164542 |
Master mimetype | application/pdf |
Master file format | |
Software | Abobe PDF Version 1.4 |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Oral history transcripts | Start -Homecoming Work Now!. CHING FU SAYS: It’s not what you're got, but what you air. Tuesday, October 1, 1935 Published by Associated Students ARIZONA STATE TEACHERS COLLEdE, FLAGSTAFF, ARIZONA*" Volume XXIII—No. 3 PWA Assures Campus Rejuvenation Pine To Sponsor Royalty Election King, Q ueen For Huge Fete To Be Elected Couple Will Hold Honored Posts In Parade, Dance _ And Banquet Pine To Scoop Results Of Election To Be Held Until Next Issue Of The Pine Students of Arizona State Teachers college .ynll have the opportunity of naihing their most popu lar co-ed arid collegian on the campus next Friday morning when they g ather in Ashurst auditorium - to select their Homecoming king and queen. LarfC year . the honor of being the cbmpus royalty fell to Miss Helen Gibbons and Chester Fuller. This year, however, because Fuller has graduated, the field will be open to all male competition without any male who has held the position. Miss Gibbons is still a registered student, and is expected to be among the likely candidates; The election, held annually by the J*INE, will not be made lengthy by unnecessary nominations and procedure, but will be carried .on by. giving each student a piece of paper on which-'he is to write the name of Iris choice for king and queen of Homecoming. After the votes have been collected, they will be counted by the editorial staff of the PINE, As the s t o iy i s ^ "P IN E scoop, no information will be given out or published until the next issue of tbm PINE. ho king and queen elected next Friday will have the supreme Won-or of leading the Homecoming parade and of being the guest^/of honor a t the dance and bafiquet, aside from being considered the most popular couple on the campus. The PINE urges that all faculty members and students to be present a t the required assembly next Friday and help pick the campus ro y alty Open Forum House Now Available For Discussion G r o u p s Open Forum may again hold its discussion and debates if the club can be reorganized. Dr. Tormey, to whom the fate of the Forum House was assigned, told the PINE th at the house will be open to all discussion groups, but to these groups only. The Open Forum house was built by the students under the direction of the Forum advisers, Dr. Hill and Miss Lynn, and was paid for by the annual Lumberjack Follies. Faculty forum will occasionally be held' in the Open Forum hou^e. The faculty forum program begins on October 15, a t 8:00 p. m., at which time Dr. Victor Kelley will speak on the recent developments in the improvement of instruction of bi-linguals. On November 17 a t 2:30 p. m. Miss Bess Chappell will speak on homemaking in the Orient. Dean Milliara Tinsley will talk on America’s preparedness policy on December 4, a t 8 p. m. Faculty Will Entertain At Soiree Wed. Annual Party To Include Five Hundred Flagstaff Townspeople • President Tormey and the faculty of the Arizona State Teachers college will entertain 500 F lagstaff guests at a faculty soiree on Wednesday evening, October 2, at 8 o’clock in Ashurst auditorium. The soiree is an annual affair presented by the faculty to further the growing interest between the college and F lagstaff townspeople. Invitations have beeri n«mt to Mr. M. R. Tilloteon, superintendent of the Grand Canyon national park, and to Mr. Larry Williams of Williams, as well as to the leading citizens of Flagstaff. Mrs. Grace Crose, critic teacher, is general chairman of the affair. Mrs. Catherine Beckwith h a s charge of decorations and is being assisted* by Mr. Cree and Miss Klonda Lynn. The entertainm ent program has not as yet been announced, but something unusual is promised. Varied Assembly Programs To Be Given In Future There will be no assembly Wednesday, October 2, as this time has been set aside each month for religious groups to hold their meetings. Chester F. Dearer hopes this time will be used by the religious groups as suggested. Ordinarily in other schools Chapel is held some time during each week or month, but it was decided by the assembly committee to give one Wednesday each month to individual religious group meetings instead of a chapel for everyone. On October 9, Mary G. Boyer has charge of the Homecoming program. Last year’s program gave a contrast between the old and new of Homecoming at Flagstaff. Mrs. Bessie Kidd Best on October 15 will have charge of a program to be given by the children of Maine school. On October 23, according to present plans by Mr. Deaver, Mrs. Isabella Greenway, Arizona congresswoman, will speak to the students. Music R e f e r e n c e Library At College Is Being Planned Adding to ita library of phonographic records, the music department of F lagstaff State Teachers college has ordered albums which will include a set of records depicting the early history of music from 270 B. C. to the time of Bach. Also -included will be records of music since Bach. The new victor book of symphonies and Bouer’s "20th century music” are among additions. Such a library has not been available to Flagstaff. I t will be a general reference library, for use of both students and townspeople. Prof. Eldon A. Ardrey, head of the department, announced arrangements are being made for a suitable room for the library. “It is unusual for schools or libraries to be able to furnish such reference work, and as the equipment i* of great value, it is necessary that greatest care be given it,” he said. Heads Homecoming Mitts Mary G. Boyer, above, is rapidly completing plana for making the 1935 Homecoming one of the best in Lumberjack history. Library Adds Many Books During Year 7110 People Used Our Library From November 1934 To June 1935 Since November, 1934, the library' has received 1271 new books, 5010 new pamphlets, 390 mounted pictures, and six maps. The total-dum ber of people using the library, during the months of November to June was 7140, not counting those reading reserved books. Of these 605 were faculty members, 492 were townspeople and correspondence students. Two weeks circulation amounted to 28,268; of this 545 were pamphlets, 2138 were pictures. July holds the record for two weeks circulation. * June holds the record for reserve book circulation. Reserved books circulated over night during these months was 7941; there has been no count taken of those used in the reading room during the day. Besides furnishing reading material, the library is equipped to keep it in good condition by doing its own minor repairing, such ad restoring loose pages, backs, etc. All books needing rebinding are sent to a bindery. Pi Kaps Hold Spanish Feed For P led g es Faculty Sponsor, Dr. Kelley, Attends As Twenty- Six Gather Biller Presides I # __ [ Plan Stttfc 4*tenie To Be Held In Oak Creek In October | At an informal Spanish dinner i held at Miguel’s cafe Sunday evening, September 29, members of | the Pi Kappa Epsilon fraternity entertained approximately 16 prospective pledges. With 12 members of the fra t in attendance and with Dr. Kelley, faculty sponsor, present, a brief outline of Pi Kappa Epsilon purpose and procedure was outlined to the fraternity guests. According to Harry Biller, president of Pi Kaps, continued activity throughout the year will be the goal of the organization. Plans are completed for a stag picpic to be held in Oak Creek canyon during the month of October, with the definite date to be announced in the near future. Those attending the dinner were Mepibers Sid Knudsen , Walter Tocco, Jeff Ferris, Kenny Hurl-bert, John Herrera, Jack Blair, James Williams, Robert Eunson, Tommy Tucker and H arry Biller. Guests were Dr. Kelley, Emmett DeVaney, Bob Monroe, A rt McNeil, John Aston, Vic Sheffield, Don Clark, Joe-Tissaw, Ed Eckert, Jim Patterson, Sam Ilitsky, Robert Fish, Charles Osterberg, Paul Herrera, John Gault, Sid Smith, Virgil Crowley and Ted Krupp. Omicron Kappa Gamma Pledges Raise Club Funds New members of Omicron Kappa Gamma, home economics club, took over the concessions a t the game and sold pop com last Saturday to raise money for the club fund. The fund is to be used for social entertainments during the year. A banquet will be held soon after Homecoming. New members are Guinola Robinson, M a r e D * Mario, Joie A j t J - c s u T J»iu m, M ary Bowie, Wilma Faulkner and Melba Flake. D e ba t e r s Meet To Plan Coming Debate S e as on The Debate club under leadership of Pi Kappa Delta President Reed Freeman, met last Wednesday evening at 7 o’clock to begin initial plans for the coming debate season. The national Pi Kappa Delta question has been received: Resolved, th at Congress should have power to reverse any 4-5 decision of the Supreme Court by a two-thirds vote. The entire club at present is working on the Junior Speech Arts League debate question, Resolved, th at the U. S. government should adopt a plan of pensioning persons over 60 years of age a t the rate of $50 a month, provided the annual income is under $500 and property is under $1000 valuation. Practice debates begin Wednesday evening, October 2, with Ray Davis and Virgil Crawley upholding the negative and Carl Freeman and John Miller upholding the affirmative side of the queafcion. All lower division students are eligible for junior division debating and upper division students are eligible to debate the national question. Debates which the club is l o o f ing forward to with special interest are the Junior Speech Arta meet at Tempe this fall; PI Kappa Delta practice tournam ent a t San Francisco, Calif., near Thanksgiving time, and the national tourna-ment at Houston, Tex., n ex t spring. j g r o y • Herbert Swick came up from Miami, Ariz., to see the game last Saturday. SUPER COLLEGIATE CUT IS OFFERED TO BURY INMATES Armed with three pairs of scissors, one comb, and high hopes of training a barber to take over the college free haircut business, Joe Glasson. Jim Dunbar, Tom Tucker, and Edwin Eckert officially opened the Bury hall barber shop in room 13 last Sunday when Keith Couch obtained the Collegiate Cut. Due to lack of bowls and other tools, the barbers offer a free super*-coH*giate bowl cut to anyone who will contribute implements to the economizing cause. Keith is recovering fine. It is thought that he will be able to remove the adhesive tape before Homecoming. Bids On New Building To Open Oct. 11 President Tormey Announces A. S. T. C. Campus To Be Improved R e m o d e l i n g Homecoming Conflagration To Burn High Bonfire To Include Sophomore Paddles And Telephone Booths Aplenty The take-off for this year’s Homecoming events will be fu rnished by an amassed conflagration of every collectible—from sophomore paddles to telephone booths. Through the freshman efforts, the traditional bonfire, the night before Homecoming, is expected to blaze higher and brighter than ever before. The sophomores are requesting each freshmah to do his share and contribute anything that will burn, either personal or otherwise, so that Homecoming will s ta rt up with a blaze. A1 West, Chain Gang leader, will direct the work of collecting suitable material. Just after dusk, the grriht pyre will be lighted and the savage inm ates“of A. S. T. C. will emerge tq gloat over the blazq and then p?3nce off to the rally in anticipation of chalking up another mark for the Lumberpack team. The sophomore paddles will probably not be too evident because it is rumored th at the freshmen intend to help the fire along with some of those hot, stinging ones. Forensic Society Meets To Shape Debate Question The second meeting of the Forensic society was held Wednesday evening to shape up the plana for the Junior debate question. The questibn, as announced at the first meeting, has to do with the old age pension. Reports by Virgil Crawley and Ray Davis gave some high lights on the subject and then Dr. Hill contributed some well-founded arguments. The meeting served to crystallixc the question still more, ard assignments which included a preliminary debate wet* given for the next meeting. Crawley and Davis to defend the negative, while Miller and Carl Freeman are to upbold the negative. The membership of the organization has increased over the previous meeting. Tho'W attending were President Reed Freeman, Secretary Inez Udall, Jeanne^- son, Arman PftfepW, Vernon liken, Victor Sheffield, Ray Davia. Virgil Crawley, Lamar Shelley, Mabel McKnight, Olga Kulinovieh, Tom Slade, Gwendolyn Pace, John Miller, Sara Bodily and Carl Free- New Girls’ Dormitory And Dining Hall To Be Built Actual assurance of a vastly improved campus in the near future was made known at Flagstaff last week when Dr. Tormey, president of the college, announced that bids on the new $380,000 building project will be opened October 11. The plans now call for a new girls’ dormitory, netf dining hall, addition and remodeling of Taylor hall, addition to heating plant, and new president’s residence. The new project will rectify the crowded conditions now Buffered by the students a t the F lagstaff institutions. Work is progressing rapidly on the college training school building th at is being done under PWA administration, as will the new Iwildings on the campus. These bids will be opened this month by the members of the col-> lege board at the Flagstaff State college. ;These ’members are p r . H. E. Hendrix, state sufterintend-it of instruction, chairman; Earl C. Slipher, secqretary, and Chandler M. Wood, member. The project h ai been hanging fire since the last meeting of the stafe legislature and it is hoped th at the buildings will be ready for «9c by next n il. The present work th at is being done on the old training school bttilding will tnake {t a completely remodeled school structures At pYesent the training school students are being cared for in the old main building. I t is planned to hjtve the regular building ready next month some time. Campbell Hall Elects Officers Campbell hall women held an election meeting last week In Campbell hall living room. Ruth Powles was elected president; “Brix" -Moore, vice-president; jOlga Kulinovieh, secretary, and Dorothy Peach, social manager. Plans for Homecoming were discussed and a committee to arrange a Homecoming float was chosen. Those chosen on the committee are Peggy Way, M ary Morse and Ruthanna Jackson. CALENDAR Wedneaday, October 1 Morton hall party—Sophomore women entertain freshmen women ——0:15 p. m. Pi Kappa Epsilon, .9:80, Bury hall lobby. Thuraday, Detober 2 Newman club meeting, room 32, 10:45 p. m. Faculty entertains townspeople —Aafeurst auditorium, 8:30 p. m. Friday, October S Newman club party, St. Anthony’* hall, 8:00 p. m. Satwday. October 5 Foptball—New Mexico Aggies S. T. C., Skidmore field, 2:80 dance, sophomore class honora freshman class and visiting team, 8:30 p. m. Eliaabeth Glenn spent the weekend with her parents in Cottonwood, Aria. |
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