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Li'l Jack Says: M ake your prom ises as hard to break as your habits. LUMBERJACK V O L . 43 — No. 19 W E D N E S D A Y , M A R C H 9, 1955 P U B L IS H E D B Y A S S O C IA T E D S T U D E N T S A R IZ O N A S T A T E C O L L E G E A T F L A G S T A F F , A R IZ O N A Thought for the Week: The guy who thinks that no girl is go o d enough for him m ay be right, but he m ay be left, too. Annual Song Festival Slated Wednesday, March 16 Final plans are being made for th** third annual Song Fest to be hold next Wednesday, March 16, at * p. m. in the College Union Auditorium. Chairman of the program is Dean Holland, president of Delta phi Alpha music fraternity. A ll organizations are eligible to participate. Several campus groups are sponsoring candidates for Song Fest Queen. Popular vote by the student body on Tuesday w ill determine the students’ choice. Mary Louise Shumway, last y ear’s queen, will be on hand to crown her successor. Each entry in the contest will be expected to present a warmup number and a competition number. There will be a time limit, with three impartial judges chosen from Flagstaff citizens interested in the college music program. Admission will be 35 cents. The public is cordially invited to attend the annual affair. Last year’s place winners in the Song Fest included Delta Sigma Phi, national social fraterni t y, most amusing number; Associated Women Students, most original number; and Cardinal Key and Blue Key combined for the best serious number. According to Fred Hawk, publicity chairman, the Song Fest*is presented to stimulate interest in group singing and all campus organizations are invited to e n t e r various song types. Three small gold cups will be awarded to first place winners. Last Call Sounded For Annual Pics! Forest K. Martin, photography editor of the 1955 LA CUESTA. has announced that all pictures for the annual must bf taken no later than F riday, March 11. Organizations have requested individual pictures for their section do not need to do anything further Those organizations who desire group pictures and-or group pictures of officers should contact Martin and a r range for a picture before F r iday. Any other pictures, such as snap shots, etc.. should also he given to him before F rid a y .. Makf* appointments for pictures by contacting M a rtin in person or by calling extension 21 and leaving the in form ation there. Order forms for organizational pictures were sent out some time ago and should already be in the hands of the annual editor, Gayle McMullen. Eighteen C oeds W in Red C ross Certificates Red Cross certificates for home nursing have been earned by eighteen students of the class in Home Nursing and F am ily Health ac cording- to Mrs. Esther K. Scharpenberg, instructor. Edith Venberg. La Habra, Calif.. Red Cross Supervisor for the district of Southern C aliforn ia and Arizona, directed the studies in Mrs. Scharpenberg’s class and announced that Red Cross instructor’* certificates had been earned hy Mrs. Scharpenberg and Dr. Byrd Burton, head of home economics department, and proficiency certificates earned by P at Koontz, Edith Willeford. Pauline Roland, Elvira Rui7, Shirley Ryberg. Helen Smith, Nancy Kramer. Dorotha Cash, Elaine Crowder, Jea n Dawson, 'Sophia Chavez, Joyce W illiams, Coraleen Mayes. Rosalie Carrillo. Kathleen Bradshaw, Louisa Lopez. Christine Cowley, and Vera Grimes. Foundation Offers Stetson University Law Scholarships Ten college students will be selected this year to study law at “ one of Am ericas Most Interesting Law Schools” under a scholarship program set up by Leroy Highbaugh. Sr., of the Highbaugh. Foundation of Louisville, Kv., according to Dr. J . Ollie Edmunds, president of Stetson University. The scholarships, valued at 51, 500 each over a three-year period. will be used at Stetson's College of Law beginning this fall when Florida’s oldest college of law opens its fifty-fifth year and its second on its new campus in St. Petersburg. “ Mr. Highbaugh’s concern for training Christian lawyers makes this one of the most stimulating gifts Stetson University has ever received, ” Dr. Edmunds said. “As far as I know these are the only scholarships available in a church-related college of law in the entire Southeast for the specific purpose of training potential Christian leaders in the legal profession. '* 'As I see it, ** Highbaugh said, "lawyers write the laws, lawyei-s ineerpret the laws, and lawyers enforce the laws. I wanted to help a college of law which is church-related because the more religion we can get into our laws, the better they will be. " Stetson’s college of law is patterned after the British “in n” system where students and faculty live and study together. This is made possible at Stetson as the law school buildings were constructed as a resort hotel. In addition to ample facilities for classrooms, offices and a library, there are 100 bedrooms with private or connecting baths. A swimming pool and ten n i s courts are on the campus and an 38-hole golf course adjacent to the grounds. The famed gulf beach is a mile away. Competetive examinations will be given to select the scholarship winners. Time and place for these examinations may be obtained from the dean. Summer session for both beginning and advanced students is scheduled for June 14-August 22. Fall term classes begin September 19. Annual Chorus Concert Tour Slated Soon Forty members of the Shrine of the Ages Choir will leave the campus Sunday, April 3, on their annual spring tour. Associate D irector and Conductor Jack Swartz is substituting this year for Dr. Eldon A. Ardrey, director and founder of the choir since 1935. The spring tour will include a program at the Desert Devotionals in LaLoma Amphitheatre. Litchfield Park, on Palm Sunday and will end at the South R im of the Grand Canyon. On Easter Morning the Choir will participate in the annual Grand Canyon Easter Sunrise Services. It will be the 21st annual service, broadcast world wide. It will be the 20th participation of the Shrine of the Ages Choir in the broadcast, the choir having missed one year, 1945, dur-ng World War II. Former Governor, Howard Pyle, producer and narrator of the sunrise services since 1935. and now of Washington. D. C., will again narrate the service. Following is the itinerary of the choir: Sunday. Apr. 3: Desert Devotional LaLoma Amphitheater 4 p. m. Litchfield Monday, Apr. 4: Assembly Mesa High School, 10 a . m. Mesa Monday, Apr. 4: Assembly Chandler High School, 1: 25 p . m. Chandler Monday. Apr. 1: Concert Coolidge High School, 8 p. m. Coolidge Tuesday, Apr. 5: Assembly Ma rana High School, 11 a. m. Marana Tuesday, Apr. 5; Television Program KVOA, 9: 30 p. m. Tucson Wednesday, Apr 6: A s s e m b ly Florence Union High School, 1 p. m. Florence Thursday. Apr. 7: Concert Sunny slope High School, 8 p. m. Phoenix Friday, Apr. 8: Concert Prescott High School 8 p . m. Prescott Sunday, Apr. 10: “Shrine of the Ages" Broadcast, NBC. KTAR Sunrise Service at South R im ol the Grand Canyon. 6: 30 a . m. Wednesday, Apr. U : Concert College Auditorium, 8 p. m. Flagstaff. W IN S R O TARY AW A R D S — Dr. Tom O. Bellwood, left, looks on as Frank Dickinson, president of Flagstaff Rotary Club, presents Club scholarship check* to Carol Lynn Schaab and Donna May Roth. Parking Plan Is Given To Council The student court committee of the student council presented council members with mimeographed copies of a five-page tentative parking plan Monday night. I f passed by the council, th< parking rules and regulations would place administration for motor vehicle use on campus in the hands of the proposal student court and campus polite, with cleans of student personnel service cooperating in the enforcement of the statutes. Committee chairman Car! Coffelt in submitting the plan to council members, cited. current traffic problems to come with the expected increase in enrollment He feels that the plan would bo even more of a necessity as the college grew. President L. A. Eastburn, in whose home the council members met as dinner guests, outlined for the council his plan for one-way zoning of the street between sFlenee and arlministration buildings and Old Main <m the west, the music hall and the president's house on the south, and farther on the home economics wine and the women's gym. H r cited the bottle neck in front o f thp women’s gym and the blind comer between the Kcience I building and the music hall. The ' street would be one-way running south from the administration building and east from the music hall. Suggested general provisions included in the plan inelude: 1. All state and city traffic regulations gnveming t h e u s e of motor vehicles will he observed at all times. 2 . Th* speed limit for motor ve- Dutch Supper For Students Set By Council, AMS, AW S Constitution To Be Aired In Assembly “The Constitution Committee will hold a big assembly in about two weeks, after the revision of the constitution Is completed/' said Student Body President Fred Sughrue. The purpose of this assembly will be explanation -of the newly revised constitution by the various members of the committee. After the assembly an election wild be held so the students will be able to vote on the new constitution. According to Sughrue, the committee has been working hard and seriously on rewriting the constitution. The present constitution is very outdated. An example of its obsoleteness is that it recognizes the college newspaper as still being the “ Pino ” About the constitution, Sughrue said, “ Tt is my desire that every student here at A. S. C. take a n interest in the work that the Constitution Revision Committee is doing, and realize their responsibility to understand and desire passage of the new constitution in the election, and afterwards keep in mind why the constitution is of the utmost importance in the organized student government of A. S. C. ” hide s on the campus shall be f i f teen <15) miles p e r hour. 3. It is illegal to park on any driveway, road, or in any other place on the campus not specifically designated as a parking area. 4. The college assumes no responsibility for damage to motor vehicles or for any loss by theft while cars are operated or parked on campus. 5. Students must register their motor vehicles when they enroll each semester, including the family car or any other car which is used occasionally, and obtain an official sticker. The student couit or campus, police shall be notified of any car purchased or available to a S tu d e n t after registration or school begins. A fee of fjQc will be charged for registration. 6. A t the end of each semester the student shall turn in old registration material and get new registration and sticker. _________ 7. All students must display an identification sticker on their motor vehicle a t all times. The stickers shall be placed on the lower right side of the windshield. 8 A fte r Sep4 88 rita ttom will be issued to unauthorized cars found on campus parking lots, and I afte r Oct. 10, unauthorized cars found on parking lots w ill be haul1 ed away. Also enclosed in the plan will be provisions for zoning parking space, special parking for faculty anw visitors, penalties for break ing tra ffic laws, clearing of streets and lots for snow-plow access, and recommendations for setting up lots. An estimated ISO or more parking spaces for individual cars are noted, not counting two major parking lots. State Association Picks ASC Profs Pollster Measures Views On Student Body Activity Interest Octones' Added To Chorus Says Director Swartz Something new has been added to the Shrine of Ages Choir. The Octones. official small ensemble of the choir, will replace the girl’s trio and the quartet, according to Jack Swartz, director of the choir and assistant professor of music. Carolyn Brown, Sara H o l l a n d , Jewell Ellsworth. Dorothy C o l e man, Jack Hokanson. Fred Hawk, William Norris Arthur and William Kelsay make up the ensemble. They will sing light modern songs especially fitted for small groups The Octoners will make their first home appearance at the Choir home concert, Wednes d a y , April 13 at 8 p. m. in the college auditorium. They will sing three or four songs during each tour performance. After the tour the Octones will sing for conventions and service clubs. The Shrine of Ages Choir will clim ax their tour with the annual sunrise radio broadcast at the rim of the Grand Canyon on Easter Sunday. Student Teacher's Notes: Student Teaching Writer Describes Delicate Surgery By Ninth Grader Have you ever seen a n in th - grader perform a postmortem on his note-book? It is one of the most facinating operations ever performed. He begins by cutting a small t r iangle somewhere on the cover. Soon he enlarges this triangle to a square and then a rectangle. With a few deft strokes of his knife (which is sharpened to razor- like keenness) he soon has the cardboard base of one aide of his note-book bare**. Now he pauses to contemplate the appearance of this drab, grey, Profs Do It Too cardboard. However, after a few minutes, the operation is continued. He next attacks the other side of the notebook. Again he goes through the stages of cutting, ripping. and tearing. This time he begins at the edge of the notebook cover. When this part of the operation is completed, he momentarily pauses to collect the pieces of the notebook cover now literally covering the desk and froor. After disposing of the scrap heap at various handy places fsuch as: out on the window sill, under the chair, in his pockets, and those of his friends) the gruesome butchering is continued. Now the real work of cutting up the back of the once a suable notebook is begun. A fte r more ripping and cutting, the poor note-book is finally reduced to a frame «f cardboard. A fte r contemplating on the apparently satisfactory cut-up job, be then begins to “ decorate” and further multilate the unfortunate note-book with pictures fusing the term loosely) drawn in pencil. The operation completed, he now puts the unreconizable victim away, and begins work on the desk. An invitation to hold the seventh annual meeting of ihe Arizona College Association on the campus of Arizona State College at Flagstaff was accepted at this year’s convention. The sixth annual meeting was held at Arizona State College. Tempe. March 5. Divisional chairmen who were elected and will preside over sectional meetings next year include: Dr. Margaret Carrigan, head of the English department, English Division; Dr. C. K Davis, director of the training school, education; Dr Garland Downum, professor of history, social sciences; Kenneth Derifield, associate professor of science, biological sciences; all of the college faculty Dr. W. W. Tinsley, head of the history department, was e le c te d secretary of the social sciences division. Holland; and a violin solo by Lucy Northcutt. ! Hosts and Hostesses will include B e t t y Bartlett, chairman, and H a rriet Randolph, March Weaver, Carl Coffelt, Dave Kelley, and J im •Took. With Janelle Epperson as j chairman, Dr. Agnes Allen. F ra n ! kie Lou Felch. and Leslie Kinnison I will be in charge of admissions. I The table decoration committee, cliairniencd by Joyce Longfellow, will include Dean of Women Miss Margaret Pipes, Mrs. Esther Sullivan. Ann Blair, Carolyn Brown, and Mary Louise Shumway. Cleanup work will be handled by D r. - Alien and AWS. Preparation and serving committees include: Cold cuts and cheese;. "Mrs. Esther Scharpenberg, Lynn Tucker, Bobby Frazer, Betty Waddle. Eu-jiee Stark, and chairman Iris Brewer. Relishes: Dr. Margaret Carrigan, Mrs. L. A. Eastburn, Billie Faye Roland, Charlene A maim, Shirley Ryberg, and chairman Terry! Arendsee. Macaroni Salad; Joanne Chiappetti, chairman;, and Jerry Gililand and June Elder. Bread and crackers: C hainnac Jeannoate Donovan. Coraleen Mays. Barbara La tremors, Dodee Gae-frke, Miss Helen Oswalt, Vivienne Morgan, Jan is Arnold, and A r lyne Rogers. Fruit and cookies: Miss Junia MacAlister. Janie Severson. Helen Smith, DeAnn Holland and chairman Joyce Williams Beverages: Mrs. Betty Brown. Miss A lthea R ag sdale, Pat Lorona, Peggy Barlow, Mina Morrow. Sally Walsh, and. 1 «we 11 Ellsworth, chairman. Teheran U. Study Fellowships Told Notice There will be a meeting of F uture Teachers of America in the Town Girls room (209i in the College Union Building Thursday evening a t 7 o'clock. Pictures will be taken for the annual at that time. Playmaker Drama Has Moderate Success Conducted by BERNARD KENNA This week’s poll question was asked with the two forthc o m in g student elections in mind, one to ratify the new constitution and the annual election of officers to be held sometim e in April. Interest within the last year has been higrh where student government is concerned. But it’s an interest that we *eel can be kept higrh. and so our question this week was: ‘How would you promote More interest in Student Body activities — elections, constitution revision, and so forth V Pat McGuire— I really don’t think interest can be promoted something like that— either one has interest or one doesn’t It is the same in our national government. No one is interested unless be thinks something has been put over on him. Bunny Haefle— Students might become more interested in these things i f they were more emphasize through the use of posters, as- ^mblies, etc., and if they had a clearer idea of what the actual duties of their representatives included and what they have the power '** accamplish. Rewriting the constitution would appear more important if they knew what it was now and how they might benefit from certain revisions. Bob Clubbs—I believe there is quite a bit of interest in these activities at the present time. The last student body election showed a turnout which was greater than ever before and a good percentage of groups and individuals have started to participate in these activities, which is also a good sign. Efforts should not be made to create this interest but merely to further that which exists now. Eloise Brashear — There would be more interest in our government if the students knew more about our government and understood it, such as the student court. Gary Redm an— Students would be more interested in student activities if they were made to feel that thy had a strongr voice m student activities. Student courts and more adver- (Continued on Page 3) Rotary Scholarships G o To Coeds Roth, Schaab The Flagstaff Rotary Club will have as guests Tuesday, March 8, Miss Donna Roth and Miss Carol Schaab, freshman students, at Arizona State, who are the recipients of the Rotary Club’s scholarship. Based on scholarship, character, and need, the cash award for a semester will be presented by the president, Frank Dickinson Miss Roth, an elementary teaching major, has been active in Playmakers productions and is a pledge of Alpha Mu Eta, social sorority. Miss Schaab, a mu s i c major, is a member ol the Pom Pon Girls. Arizona Playmakers* production “ Antigone” presented in the College Union auditorium last Thursday and Friday played to small audiences in its two-nighi run. The modernized tragedy owed its birth to the play and myth written in Greek by Sophocles 2, 000 years ago, The successful modem version was adapted in moder n Umes hy French dramatist Jean Anouilh and again in English by Lewis Galantiere. Anouilh's adaptation was written and produced in Paris, surprisingly enough, during the Nazi occupation of World War H. T h e play's theme centers on divine law versus tyrannical man-made laws. Max Wager as tyrant-king Creon played his part to perfection. His perfection, however, tripped up the play's theme with the logic (k his arguments. Although not so convincing as Creon. Mrs. Jeri Kelsay in the title role of Antigone played a good part. Robert Humphries as her fiance Haemon and her sister, played by Julia Corrigan, were good supporting roles. The drama, in one unbroken act, rook place within and outside Cre-on’s palace in ancient Thebes. The mixture of past and present in the dialogue of the play added little to its atmosphere. Don Gellers as the Greek Chorus was outstanding at leading the audience through the plot and theme. Certificates Given Help Wanted The Writers' Club is attempting to revive “ Pine Knots. " former literary' magazine. All campus authors are invited to turn in any manuscripts to Dr. Carrigan's office for consideration as soon as possible, for possible use in the spring edition. L EAD S — Robert Humphries as Haemo? ) and Mr*. Jeri Kel*ay in the title role of ‘Antigone* are »hown in the play nre*ented by Arizona Playmakers last Thursday and Friday night* in the College Union Auditorium. The Advanced Design class on Tuesday and Thursday mornings is smail and thus very informal. Thp class period is usually spent in working on projects. One morning the hum of business- like accomplishment filled the room. Mr Gibson joined the group of budding artist# and was painting color schemes with poster colors. Suddenly a sense of foreboding filled the room. Something was. wrong, and the feeling filled the I a ir like the static electricity. In a small voice Mr. Gibson said. ( “ How long do you have to paint ' before you don't stick your brush in the wrong ja r of paint? " Combining theory with practice a course in mother and baby car* is offered by the home economics! department. At the completion ol the prescribed study, according t« Mrs. - Esther K. Scharpenberg, instructor, credentials were received by Mr. and Mrs. William Johnson. Mrs. J im Shook, and Mrs. Roland Anderson of Flagstaff; and Mrs. Ted Filer. Glendale. The Studeut Council, Associated Men Students, and Associated Women Students, will host the entire student body Sunday night, March 13, at a Dutch Supper in the dining hall. It will l>e followed by a free showing of “‘Broken Arrow" in the auditorium. Only 25c will be charged for t in supper, according to eo-eh airmen Niki Cullum and Peggy Jacobson. The 5-6: 30 p. m a ffa ir will be open to everyone on campus plus Cottage City and town residents. The menu will include cold cuts, macaroni salad, relishes, hors d'oeuvres. dessert, and beverages. The movie “Broken Arrow”, filmed in Oak Creek Canyon south of here, will be presented gratis to the student body by Joe Rolle at T p. m. Entertainment during the supper will include faculty imitations by Burton Miller and Laddie Coor; a modern dance by Ann Tovrea; a vocal duet by Sara and DeAnn Dorothy Strickland New Phelps-Dodge Scholarship Holder Dorothy Jean Strickland. Hoi brook, junior student, wns awarded one of the eight Phelps Dodge 1500-a-year scholarships this week it was announced by Miss Marg aret Pipes, dean of women. * Granted on the basis o f high srholarship, high promise ar:; l ability, personality, character and leadership, the annual scholarship is continuous upon the maintenance of a high level of performance upon which the original award was made. Two scholarship* for each college class are made avilahie. Miss Strickland succeeds Mrs. Judith Mercer Connelly who left college at the end of the fall semester to be with her husband, a teacher in the Holbrook P u b lic Schools. Daughter of Tray J . Strickland, Petrified Forest, Dorothy is m ajoring in English and rninoring in art. A graduate of Holbrook High School, 1949. she was salutatorian, elected as All ‘Round Girl, member of Arizona G irl's State, received the D . A . R . Citizenship award. was student body social manager, art editor of the annual and active in dramatics and music Miss Strickland attended Business College, Albuquerque. N. M University of New Mexico, and California Western University prior to enrollment at the Flagstaff college in the fall of 195-4. She is employed as part-time secretary to Nelo R ho ton. insurance agent, while-attending college. Active in campus organizations. Miss Strickland is secretary of the Wesley-Westminister Club, vicepresident of the Associated Women Students, appeared in the Playm a k e rs production of "Th** Mediu m . " and is a member of I tie Shrine of the Aces Choir. | The University of Teheran 1s offe rin g American students two j fellowships for graduate study or i research in Tran during 1955-56. it |was announced today by Kenneth j Holland. President of the Institute j of International Education, 1 East . <I7th Street, New York City. The awards cover maintenance, | tuition and round-trip transportation between the United States and Tran Closing date for application is April 1, 1955. The grants are for study or research in the sciences or humanities, with special opportunities for concentration on Persian language and literature. Some knowledge of the Persian language Is required. I Male candidates under 35 years of age will get preference for these awards. Dependents may not acc om p a n y the grantees. Eligibility I requirements are: | (1) U. S. citizenship; j (21 A bachelor’s degree by the jtim e the award is to be taken up; | (3) A good academic record and . demonstrated capacity for independ e n t study or research; ] (4i Good character, personality, and adaptability; and 1 15) Good health.
Object Description
Rating | |
Item number | 1955_03_09 |
Creator | Northern Arizona University. Associated Students. |
Title | The Lumberjack, March 9, 1955. |
LCCN | sn94050581 |
Volume | 043 |
Issue | 19 |
Date | 1955-03-09 |
Type | Text |
Physical format | Newspaper |
Collection name | Northern Arizona University: The Lumberjack |
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 | 1955_03_09.pdf |
Master file creation date | 2014-02-06 |
Master file size | 14321698 |
Master mimetype | application/pdf |
Master file format | |
Software | Abobe PDF Version 1.4 |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Oral history transcripts |
Li'l Jack Says:
M ake your prom ises as hard to break as
your habits. LUMBERJACK V O L . 43 — No. 19 W E D N E S D A Y , M A R C H 9, 1955
P U B L IS H E D B Y A S S O C IA T E D S T U D E N T S A R IZ O N A S T A T E C O L L E G E A T F L A G S T A F F , A R IZ O N A
Thought for the Week:
The guy who thinks that no girl is go o d
enough for him m ay be right, but he m ay
be left, too.
Annual Song Festival Slated
Wednesday, March 16
Final plans are being made for
th** third annual Song Fest to be
hold next Wednesday, March 16,
at * p. m. in the College Union
Auditorium.
Chairman of the program is
Dean Holland, president of Delta
phi Alpha music fraternity. A ll organizations
are eligible to participate.
Several campus groups are sponsoring
candidates for Song Fest
Queen. Popular vote by the student
body on Tuesday w ill determine
the students’ choice. Mary
Louise Shumway, last y ear’s
queen, will be on hand to crown
her successor.
Each entry in the contest will
be expected to present a warmup
number and a competition number.
There will be a time limit, with
three impartial judges chosen
from Flagstaff citizens interested
in the college music program.
Admission will be 35 cents. The
public is cordially invited to attend
the annual affair.
Last year’s place winners in the
Song Fest included Delta Sigma
Phi, national social fraterni t y,
most amusing number; Associated
Women Students, most original
number; and Cardinal Key and
Blue Key combined for the best
serious number.
According to Fred Hawk, publicity
chairman, the Song Fest*is
presented to stimulate interest in
group singing and all campus organizations
are invited to e n t e r
various song types. Three small
gold cups will be awarded to first
place winners.
Last Call Sounded
For Annual Pics!
Forest K. Martin, photography
editor of the 1955 LA CUESTA.
has announced that all
pictures for the annual must
bf taken no later than F riday,
March 11. Organizations
have requested individual
pictures for their section
do not need to do anything further
Those organizations who
desire group pictures and-or
group pictures of officers
should contact Martin and a r range
for a picture before F r iday.
Any other pictures, such as
snap shots, etc.. should also he
given to him before F rid a y ..
Makf* appointments for pictures
by contacting M a rtin in
person or by calling extension
21 and leaving the in form ation
there.
Order forms for organizational
pictures were sent out
some time ago and should already
be in the hands of the
annual editor, Gayle McMullen.
Eighteen C oeds W in
Red C ross Certificates
Red Cross certificates for home
nursing have been earned by eighteen
students of the class in Home
Nursing and F am ily Health ac
cording- to Mrs. Esther K. Scharpenberg,
instructor.
Edith Venberg. La Habra, Calif..
Red Cross Supervisor for the district
of Southern C aliforn ia and
Arizona, directed the studies in
Mrs. Scharpenberg’s class and announced
that Red Cross instructor’*
certificates had been earned
hy Mrs. Scharpenberg and Dr.
Byrd Burton, head of home economics
department, and proficiency
certificates earned by P at Koontz,
Edith Willeford. Pauline Roland,
Elvira Rui7, Shirley Ryberg. Helen
Smith, Nancy Kramer. Dorotha
Cash, Elaine Crowder, Jea n Dawson,
'Sophia Chavez, Joyce W illiams,
Coraleen Mayes. Rosalie
Carrillo. Kathleen Bradshaw, Louisa
Lopez. Christine Cowley, and
Vera Grimes.
Foundation Offers
Stetson University
Law Scholarships
Ten college students will be selected
this year to study law at
“ one of Am ericas Most Interesting
Law Schools” under a scholarship
program set up by Leroy
Highbaugh. Sr., of the Highbaugh.
Foundation of Louisville, Kv., according
to Dr. J . Ollie Edmunds,
president of Stetson University.
The scholarships, valued at
51, 500 each over a three-year period.
will be used at Stetson's College
of Law beginning this fall
when Florida’s oldest college of
law opens its fifty-fifth year and
its second on its new campus in
St. Petersburg.
“ Mr. Highbaugh’s concern for
training Christian lawyers makes
this one of the most stimulating
gifts Stetson University has ever
received, ” Dr. Edmunds said. “As
far as I know these are the only
scholarships available in a church-related
college of law in the entire
Southeast for the specific
purpose of training potential Christian
leaders in the legal profession.
'*
'As I see it, ** Highbaugh said,
"lawyers write the laws, lawyei-s
ineerpret the laws, and lawyers enforce
the laws. I wanted to help
a college of law which is church-related
because the more religion
we can get into our laws, the better
they will be. "
Stetson’s college of law is patterned
after the British “in n” system
where students and faculty
live and study together. This is
made possible at Stetson as the
law school buildings were constructed
as a resort hotel. In addition
to ample facilities for classrooms,
offices and a library, there
are 100 bedrooms with private or
connecting baths.
A swimming pool and ten n i s
courts are on the campus and an
38-hole golf course adjacent to the
grounds. The famed gulf beach is
a mile away.
Competetive examinations will
be given to select the scholarship
winners. Time and place for these
examinations may be obtained
from the dean.
Summer session for both beginning
and advanced students is
scheduled for June 14-August 22.
Fall term classes begin September
19.
Annual Chorus
Concert Tour
Slated Soon
Forty members of the Shrine of
the Ages Choir will leave the campus
Sunday, April 3, on their annual
spring tour. Associate D irector
and Conductor Jack Swartz
is substituting this year for Dr.
Eldon A. Ardrey, director and
founder of the choir since 1935.
The spring tour will include a
program at the Desert Devotionals
in LaLoma Amphitheatre. Litchfield
Park, on Palm Sunday and
will end at the South R im of the
Grand Canyon. On Easter Morning
the Choir will participate in
the annual Grand Canyon Easter
Sunrise Services. It will be the 21st
annual service, broadcast world
wide. It will be the 20th participation
of the Shrine of the Ages
Choir in the broadcast, the choir
having missed one year, 1945, dur-ng
World War II. Former Governor,
Howard Pyle, producer and
narrator of the sunrise services
since 1935. and now of Washington.
D. C., will again narrate the service.
Following is the itinerary of the
choir:
Sunday. Apr. 3: Desert Devotional
LaLoma Amphitheater 4
p. m. Litchfield
Monday, Apr. 4: Assembly Mesa
High School, 10 a . m. Mesa
Monday, Apr. 4: Assembly Chandler
High School, 1: 25 p . m. Chandler
Monday. Apr. 1: Concert Coolidge
High School, 8 p. m. Coolidge
Tuesday, Apr. 5: Assembly Ma
rana High School, 11 a. m. Marana
Tuesday, Apr. 5; Television Program
KVOA, 9: 30 p. m. Tucson
Wednesday, Apr 6: A s s e m b ly
Florence Union High School, 1 p. m.
Florence
Thursday. Apr. 7: Concert Sunny
slope High School, 8 p. m. Phoenix
Friday, Apr. 8: Concert Prescott
High School 8 p . m. Prescott
Sunday, Apr. 10: “Shrine of the
Ages" Broadcast, NBC. KTAR
Sunrise Service at South R im ol
the Grand Canyon. 6: 30 a . m.
Wednesday, Apr. U : Concert
College Auditorium, 8 p. m. Flagstaff.
W IN S R O TARY AW A R D S — Dr. Tom O. Bellwood, left, looks on as
Frank Dickinson, president of Flagstaff Rotary Club, presents Club
scholarship check* to Carol Lynn Schaab and Donna May Roth.
Parking Plan Is
Given To Council
The student court committee of
the student council presented council
members with mimeographed
copies of a five-page tentative
parking plan Monday night.
I f passed by the council, th<
parking rules and regulations
would place administration for
motor vehicle use on campus in the
hands of the proposal student
court and campus polite, with
cleans of student personnel service
cooperating in the enforcement of
the statutes.
Committee chairman Car! Coffelt
in submitting the plan to
council members, cited. current
traffic problems to come with the
expected increase in enrollment
He feels that the plan would bo
even more of a necessity as the
college grew.
President L. A. Eastburn, in
whose home the council members
met as dinner guests, outlined for
the council his plan for one-way
zoning of the street between sFlenee
and arlministration buildings and
Old Main |
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