The Sunflower, v.53, no.09 (November 6, 1947)

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Issue Date
1947-11-06
Type
Newspaper
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College newspapers and periodicals , Wichita (Kan.) -- Newspapers , Student publications , Wichita State University -- History , Band , Football , Theatre radioshow plays , Strange, John M.
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The Sunflower: Official student newspaper, v.53, no.9, Wichita, Kansas, November 6, 1947 - 16 pages
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Article(s): Professional show first on campus -- Drive starts for W.S.S.F. -- Varsity set on Saturday -- Enoch stays, Geist is out; Voters to fill offices: Campus party will keep two council posts; Board declares five ineligible -- Borniger is Parnassus photo choice -- Symphony concert set -- Theaters may lower rates -- Council assembles building plans -- Hon. colonel to be elected -- I.S.A. will sponsor unfinished dance -- Roundabout the campus -- Greek grads average listed; Pi Kappa Psi tops with 1.493 -- W.U. buys projector; Available to faculty -- 'General Confusion' is theme of Alpha Gam pledge dance -- Additional members selected by art feat -- Club corner / Betty -- Groups responsible for pledge walk-outs -- Phi Sigs celebrate twentieth birthday -- Ice skating classes to be held Nov. 13 -- Campus marriages not 'unusual' today -- Now, wifie!: Home troubles skid scholastic standings of married veterans -- Men's and women's rifle teams formed by University ROTC -- Pottery-making classes use native clay, declares Strange -- W.U. students want noon mixers again -- Grads obtain scholarships -- Relations club meets to discuss Palestine -- Council plans social for women soon -- Students reorganize 'El Circulo Espanol' -- Taps!: ROTC firing squad to honor war dead at military funerals -- Band celebrates forty-first year; Boasts colorful past -- Vox discipuliFrom the reader / Howard Lydick; Dean T. Campbell -- On another campus -- Display: Unusual instruments to be demonstrated by woodwind group -- Veterans need additional aid to offset skyrocketing costs -- Veterans' news / C.O. Taylor -- Tulsa apologizes -- In the limelight -- Press lacks freedom -- Dr. Jardine adopts bobbed tassel; New vogue in headdress -- Music maestro!: NYC College fights mental fatigue by console music -- Berges wins first place -- Sociology dept. head will participate in roundtable debate -- Scouts register for new opportunities -- Bands plan performance -- Cline, Curry guests of St. Louis Billikens -- Shooting?: R.O.T.C. personnel are invited to join small-bore teams -- Staples to display watercolor paintings -- Demos plan meet tonight -- Shockers seek sixth grid Saturday -- Big Billlikens want victory over Shocks -- Swish: Shocker golf squad under strokes Tulsa in Saturday contest -- Frosh lose final game -- Tulsa takes Valley lead -- Wrestling will follow touch football -- Journalism will follow touch football -- Journalism students assist station KFH news broadcasters -- Scouts in school asked to sign -- Parnassus!: Changes predicted by editor; Picture appointments begin -- Intramural league led by Phi Sigs -- Music studio is removed -- Welcome!: University host to teacher association on campus all day -- Curtain call or cry -- Landes, Siegrist vie for office tomorrow
Photograph(s): Picture story of the week: University students were treated to the first of five concerts by the Wichita Symphony Orchestra in the University Auditorium last Thursday. A capacity audience was "spellbound" by the orchestra and the soloists Frances Yeend, soprano, and Mario Lanza, tenor. Miss Yeend and Lanza are pictured at the top in a duet from "The Merry Widow." Orien Dalley, professor of musicology, directs the symphony. In the lower photo, concert principals include David Robertson, concert master, Lanza, Miss Yeend, and Dalley, conductor. p. 1 -- Joanne Grieb is chairman of the all-school varsity sponsored by Pi Kappa Psi sorority, Saturday from 9 p.m. until midnight. p. 4 -- Use of native clay is being demonstrated by J. M. Strange, professor of art, right, to Jean Rittenoure and Jarold Casey, two art students. p. 5 -- Carroll Vance Allison, 17, freshman and Pi Alpha Pi fraternity pledge, lost his life last Wednesday when his car was struck at the 53rd street crossing of the Santa Fe railroad tracks by a streamliner. p. 6 -- The 1905 Fairmount Eleven was one of the outstanding teams in the 50-year history of this University. Howard Darling, University alumnus and member of that team has kept the picture shown above of that team. Personnel include, front row left, Roy J. Kirk, guard and manager; Charles Cook, halfback; Bill Davis, center; O .C. Davis, quarterback; Bliss Isely, 160-pound tackle; Fred Belden, halfback; and Lawrence Abbey, guard. Back row, left, Willis Bates, coach; Percy Bates, halfback; George Solter, halfback; Charles Burton, quarterback; Claude Nelson, tackle; Plank, guard; Elmer Cooke, end; and Howard Darling, fullback. Not pictured are Art Solter, Ab Solter, and Fred Burton. p. 12 -- William P. Warren. p. 13 -- Shocker left half Eddie Kriwiel, 160-pound freshman from Chicago, is dropped on the Wichita 28-yard line by an unidentified Tulsa player as Hap Houlik leads interference. p. 14 -- All-Missouri Valley halfback Linwood Sexton. p. 15
Includes Collegiate Digest, v.13, no.2 photograph(s): Dr. Walter Robert operates the only coronograph in the United States at the observatory jointly maintained by the University of Colorado and Harvard in Colorado. p. 7 -- Baritone to Governor: New York's governor Thomas E. Dewey enjoyed showing his family some old photographs of "The Four Micks," a University of Michigan quartet of which he was a member. Looking on are two other members of that 1921 quartet, W.L. Berridge and Herbert Wagner. p. 7 -- "High-water pants" are the rejoinder given by these South Dakota State College men to the new long skirt styles for women. Here Bob Karolevitz measures Jake Bertram's trousers to see that they are rolled up the proper distance. Casey Anderson, Vern Miller, and Hunk Anderson (complete with engineering equipment) check to see that the job is done properly. p. 7 -- On the afternoon of registration day at Arizona State College, visitors to the office of Gilbert Cady, the school's business manager, found him to be just a skeleton of his former self. p. 7 -- Five fraternity pledges (below) at Marietta College hold a confab on the Library steps during "Courtesy Week," when each pledge is required to carry a goldfish-and-bowl with him at all times. p. 7 -- Air commuters: Living 38 miles distant from John Tarleton Agricultural College, Stephensville, Texas poses no transportation problem for Robert and Hillery Moseley. Their surplus AT-6 gets them there in less than 15 minutes from the airstrip at their ranch. p. 8 -- Coeds of SEMO State College at Cape Girardeau, Missouri, execute this study in balance and symmetry as a part of their tumbling class syllabus. p. 8 -- On the bandwagon for her daddy is two and one-half year old Bonnie Bruce, a featured attraction in a recent campus election at Ohio Wesleyan University. Coeds Lennie Miller, Betty Hart, Jean Conger, and Rusty Sutcliffe, are solidly behind Bonnie's campaign, while Rusty O'Shea, the Irish Setter, is out in front to provide that old political "pull." p. 8 -- City slickers realized a life-long ambition to milk a cow, even though it was only a mechanical one, at the Hucksters' Ball, held at Woodbury College, Los Angeles. p. 9 -- Raymond E. Cote, New York University School of Retailing, acts as an interpreter in explaining to a delegation of French merchants how fabrics are tested in the school's textile laboratory as Mrs. Kathryn C. Spencer, instructor for the course, looks on. p. 9 -- Activities that made news in the nation's classrooms: In sunny California, skiing is fast becoming a year-round sport. These Stanford University coeds learn the finer points of jumping, kick-turning--and even the gentle art of falling properly--without benefit of snow or bruises. p. 10 -- A hornets' nets to end all hornets nests is this mammoth specimen found by Joseph Toth, of East Carolina Teachers College in Greenville, NC. Here he hands it over to Nell Rose Ellis and Dr. Christine Wilton, president and faculty sponsor, respectively, of the college museum club. p. 10 -- In the University of Colorado's unique educational workshop, Science Lodge, located at the foot of the great peaks of the Continental Divide, these students study mountain geology and biology at an elevation of 9,500 feet. p. 10 -- Our near neighbors to the north of Nova Scotia Technical College study pottery and ceramic arts. Here Miss Church demonstrates her skill on a potters wheel to the class. In the picture below, coeds of Hendrix College, Conway, Ark., find that washing pots and pans plays just as important part in a homemaking course as do the recipes that go into them. p. 10
Publisher
Municipal University of Wichita
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Series
The Sunflower
v.53 no.9
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